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Rich Club Network Analysis Shows Distinct Patterns of Disruption in Frontotemporal Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease
- Source :
- Computational Diffusion MRI ISBN: 9783319111810
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Springer International Publishing, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Diffusion imaging and brain connectivity analyses can reveal the underlying organizational patterns of the human brain, described as complex networks of densely interlinked regions. Here, we analyzed 1.5-Tesla whole-brain diffusion-weighted images from 64 participants – 15 patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal (bvFTD) dementia, 19 with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease (EOAD), and 30 healthy elderly controls. Based on whole-brain tractography, we reconstructed structural brain connectivity networks to map connections between cortical regions. We examined how bvFTD and EOAD disrupt the weighted ‘rich club’ – a network property where high-degree network nodes are more interconnected than expected by chance. bvFTD disrupts both the nodal and global organization of the network in both low- and high-degree regions of the brain. EOAD targets the global connectivity of the brain, mainly affecting the fiber density of high-degree (highly connected) regions that form the rich club network. These rich club analyses suggest distinct patterns of disruptions among different forms of dementia.
Details
- ISBN :
- 978-3-319-11181-0
- ISBNs :
- 9783319111810
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Computational Diffusion MRI ISBN: 9783319111810
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....76ba88ea631d39b9a15cca357306c8d7
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11182-7_2