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Hippocampal atrophy in neurofunctional subfields in insomnia individuals

Authors :
Yang Yang
Wei Liang
Yongjun Wang
Dechang Peng
Liang Gong
Na Wang
Zhongjie Huang
Weikang Yang
Source :
Frontiers in Neurology, Vol 13 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2022.

Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to investigate the pattern of volume changes in neurofunctional hippocampal subfields in patients with insomnia and their associations with risk of development of insomnia.MethodsA total of 120 patients with insomnia (78 females, 42 males; mean age ± standard deviation, 43.74 ± 13.02 years) and 120 good sleepers (67 females, 53 males; mean age, 42.69 ± 12.24 years) were recruited. The left hippocampus was segmented into anterior (L1), middle (L2), and posterior (L3) subregions. The right hippocampus was segmented into top anterior (R1), second top anterior (R2), middle (R3), posterior (R4), and last posterior (R5) subregions. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the associations of hippocampal volume (HV) of each subfield with the risk of the development of insomnia. Mediation analyses were performed to evaluate mediated associations among post-insomnia negative emotion, insomnia severity, and HV atrophy. A visual easy-to-deploy risk nomogram was used for individual prediction of risk of development of insomnia.ResultsHippocampal volume atrophy was identified in the L1, R1, and R2 subregions. L1 and R2 volume atrophy each predisposed to an ~3-fold higher risk of insomnia (L1, odds ratio: 2.90, 95% confidence intervals: [1.24, 6.76], p = 0.014; R2, 2.72 [1.19, 6.20], p = 0.018). Anxiety fully mediates the causal path of insomnia severity leading to R1 volume atrophy with a positive effect. We developed a practical and visual competing risk-nomogram tool for individual prediction of insomnia risk, which stratifies individuals into different levels of insomnia risk with the highest prediction accuracy of 97.4% and an average C-statistic of 0.83.ConclusionHippocampal atrophy in specific neurofunctional subfields was not only found to be associated with insomnia but also a significant risk factor predicting development of insomnia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16642295
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9b03708d661b4db0a14da331562a7373
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2022.1014244