Frontiers in Neuroscience (Jan 2023)

Study of brain network alternations in non-lesional epilepsy patients by BOLD-fMRI

  • Zhisen Li,
  • Xiaoxia Hou,
  • Yanli Lu,
  • Huimin Zhao,
  • Meixia Wang,
  • Bo Xu,
  • Qianru Shi,
  • Qian Gui,
  • Guanhui Wu,
  • Mingqiang Shen,
  • Wei Zhu,
  • Qinrong Xu,
  • Xiaofeng Dong,
  • Qingzhang Cheng,
  • Jibin Zhang,
  • Hongxuan Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.1031163
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo investigate the changes of brain network in epilepsy patients without intracranial lesions under resting conditions.MethodsTwenty-six non-lesional epileptic patients and 42 normal controls were enrolled for BOLD-fMRI examination. The differences in brain network topological characteristics and functional network connectivity between the epilepsy group and the healthy controls were compared using graph theory analysis and independent component analysis.ResultsThe area under the curve for local efficiency was significantly lower in the epilepsy patients compared with healthy controls, while there were no differences in global indicators. Patients with epilepsy had higher functional connectivity in 4 connected components than healthy controls (orbital superior frontal gyrus and medial superior frontal gyrus, medial superior frontal gyrus and angular gyrus, superior parietal gyrus and paracentral lobule, lingual gyrus, and thalamus). In addition, functional connectivity was enhanced in the default mode network, frontoparietal network, dorsal attention network, sensorimotor network, and auditory network in the epilepsy group.ConclusionThe topological characteristics and functional connectivity of brain networks are changed in in non-lesional epilepsy patients. Abnormal functional connectivity may suggest reduced brain efficiency in epilepsy patients and also may be a compensatory response to brain function early at earlier stages of the disease.

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