儿童自闭症谱系障碍海马亚区功能及其临床相关性

IF 5.6
Hui-Xian Li, De-Sheng Xuan, Ronghao Mu, Chi Qin, Xin Zhao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

海马体在记忆和社会处理中起着至关重要的作用,这两者在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)中都受到损害。研究海马体亚区的功能活动可以为它们参与自闭症相关的社会和行为症状提供有价值的见解。本研究分析了来自ABIDE数据集的507名男性儿童参与者(225名ASD, 282名典型对照)的海马静息状态功能连接(rsFC)及其与临床特征的关系。将海马细分为吻侧亚区和尾侧亚区,比较两组间的rsFC模式。在左尾侧、右吻侧和右尾侧海马中观察到显著的组间差异,与广泛的皮层和皮层下区域(包括视觉、运动、顶叶和小脑网络)的连通性增强。使用海马rsFC的机器学习获得了适度的分类性能。临床上,rsFC与核心ASD症状相关:社会意识与梭状回和颞区的右侧尾侧连接有关,而限制性和重复性行为与涉及额叶、运动和小脑区的独特的喙尾侧模式有关。发病年龄在所有亚区均与rsFC呈正相关,吻侧海马参与社会情绪和运动控制网络,尾侧海马更强烈地连接视觉和感觉运动整合区域。这些发现证明了ASD海马连通性的分区域特异性,表明症状表达和发育时间有明显的前后贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hippocampal Subregion Function and Its Clinical Correlations in Childhood Autism Spectrum Disorders.

The hippocampus plays a crucial role in memory and social processing, both of which are impaired in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Investigating the functional activity of hippocampal subregions can provide valuable insights into their involvement in ASD-related social and behavioral symptoms. This study analyzed hippocampal resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) in 507 male child participants from the ABIDE dataset (225 ASD, 282 typical controls) and its relation to clinical features. The hippocampus was subdivided into rostral and caudal subregions, and rsFC patterns were compared between groups. Significant group differences were observed in the left caudal, right rostral, and right caudal hippocampus, with enhanced connectivity to widespread cortical and subcortical regions, including visual, motor, parietal, and cerebellar networks. Machine learning using hippocampal rsFC achieved modest classification performance. Clinically, rsFC correlated with core ASD symptoms: social awareness was associated with right caudal connectivity to fusiform and temporal regions, while restricted and repetitive behaviors were linked to distinct rostral-caudal patterns involving frontal, motor, and cerebellar areas. Age of onset showed positive correlations with rsFC across all subregions, with rostral hippocampus engaging socioemotional and motor control networks and caudal hippocampus connecting more strongly to visual and sensorimotor integration regions. These findings demonstrate subregional specificity of hippocampal connectivity in ASD, suggesting distinct anterior-posterior contributions to symptom expression and developmental timing.

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