A Multimodal Meta-Analysis of Structural and Functional Alterations in the Brain of Knee Osteoarthritis Systematic Review.

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain physician Pub Date : 2024-07-01
Shirui Cheng, Xiaohui Dong, Peng Lai, Xingyao Chen, Jun Zhou, Zhengjie Li, Xi Wu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Abnormalities of structural and functional brain regions might influence the persistence of knee pain, the progression, and the response to treatments in knee osteoarthritis (KOA). These complex alterations present a challenge to the understanding of its mechanism.

Objectives: To meta-analyze the concurrence across structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies.

Study design: Systematic review and meta-analysis.

Setting: This meta-analysis examined all voxel-based morphometric (VBM) and amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) studies involving the whole-brain alterations of KOA.

Methods: VBM and ALFF studies published up to May 7, 2023, were searched in the Web of Science, PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library (CENTRAL), China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, Chongqing VIP, Wanfang Database. Two independent researchers carried out study screening, quality assessment, clinical data extraction, and neuroimaging data extraction. The whole-brain voxel-based gray matter (GM) and brain activity data of KOA were collected from eligible studies and meta-analyzed using the anisotropic effect size-signed differential mapping (AES-SDM).

Results: Fourteen studies were included in this study. In VBM meta-analyses, a total of 481 patients were enrolled in this study (252 KOA and 229 healthy patients). In the ALFF meta-analysis, a total of 518 patients were enrolled in this study (265 KOA and 253 healthy patients). According to the meta-analysis, KOA had increased GM volume in the right inferior frontal gyrus and decreased GM volume in the bilateral superior frontal gyrus, as well as increased brain activity in the left inferior frontal gyrus and inferior temporal gyrus, and decreased brain activity in the left middle occipital gyrus, right supramarginal gyrus, right superior frontal gyrus, and right superior parietal gyrus compared with healthy patients.

Limitations: Most of the ALFF studies included in this meta-analysis were conducted in China. Our findings are exclusively addressed by the VBM and ALFF studies. The meta-regression between the duration of KOA, pain intensity and abnormal gray matter, and functional activity of brain regions in patients with KOA were unable to be analyzed.

Conclusion: The results of this meta-analysis indicate that patients with KOA present significant abnormalities in GM volume and functional activity. These findings contribute to a better understanding of the structural and functional abnormalities seen in patients with KOA.

膝关节骨性关节炎脑部结构和功能改变的多模式荟萃分析系统综述
背景:大脑结构和功能区的异常可能会影响膝关节骨性关节炎(KOA)患者膝关节疼痛的持续、进展和对治疗的反应。这些复杂的改变对了解其机制提出了挑战:荟萃分析结构性和功能性磁共振成像研究的一致性:研究设计:系统回顾和荟萃分析:这项荟萃分析检查了所有涉及 KOA 全脑改变的基于体素的形态计量学(VBM)和低频波动振幅(ALFF)研究:方法:在Web of Science、PubMed、EMBASE、Cochrane Library (CENTRAL)、中国国家知识基础设施(CNKI)、中国生物医学文献数据库、重庆VIP、万方数据库中检索截至2023年5月7日发表的VBM和ALFF研究。两名独立研究人员负责研究筛选、质量评估、临床数据提取和神经影像学数据提取。从符合条件的研究中收集KOA的基于体素的全脑灰质(GM)和脑活动数据,并使用各向异性效应大小符号差异图谱(AES-SDM)进行荟萃分析:本研究共纳入 14 项研究。在VBM荟萃分析中,本研究共纳入了481名患者(252名KOA患者和229名健康患者)。在ALFF荟萃分析中,本研究共纳入了518名患者(265名KOA患者和253名健康患者)。荟萃分析结果显示,与健康患者相比,KOA患者右侧额叶下回的GM体积增大,双侧额叶上回的GM体积减小,左侧额叶下回和颞下回的大脑活动增加,左侧枕中回、右侧边际上回、右侧额叶上回和右侧顶叶上回的大脑活动减少:本荟萃分析所纳入的 ALFF 研究大多在中国进行。我们的研究结果仅涉及 VBM 和 ALFF 研究。局限性:本荟萃分析所纳入的 ALFF 研究大多在中国进行,我们的研究结果仅涉及 VBM 和 ALFF 研究,无法对 KOA 患者的 KOA 持续时间、疼痛强度和异常灰质以及脑区功能活动之间的元回归进行分析:这项荟萃分析的结果表明,KOA 患者的大脑灰质体积和功能活动存在明显异常。这些发现有助于更好地理解 KOA 患者的结构和功能异常。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pain physician
Pain physician CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
21.60%
发文量
234
期刊介绍: Pain Physician Journal is the official publication of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP). The open access journal is published 6 times a year. Pain Physician Journal is a peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary, open access journal written by and directed to an audience of interventional pain physicians, clinicians and basic scientists with an interest in interventional pain management and pain medicine. Pain Physician Journal presents the latest studies, research, and information vital to those in the emerging specialty of interventional pain management – and critical to the people they serve.
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