Resting state functional connectivity of the pain matrix and default mode network in irritable bowel syndrome: a graph theoretical analysis

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作者
Michiko Kano
Cecilia Grinsvall
Qian Ran
Patrick Dupont
Joe Morishita
Tomohiko Muratsubaki
Shunji Mugikura
Huynh Giao Ly
Hans Törnblom
Maria Ljungberg
Kei Takase
Magnus Simrén
Lukas Van Oudenhove
Shin Fukudo
机构
[1] Sukawa clinic,Behavioral Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine
[2] Kirari health coop,Psychosomatic Medicine
[3] Tohoku University,Diagnostic Radiology
[4] Tohoku University Hospital,Laboratory for Brain
[5] Department of Internal Medicine & Clinical Nutrition,Gut Axis Studies (LaBGAS)
[6] Institute of Medicine,Department of Radiation Physics, Institute of Clinical Sciences, Sahlgrenska Academy
[7] Sahlgrenska Academy,Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, Diagnostic Imaging
[8] University of Gothenburg,Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences
[9] Laboratory for Cognitive Neurology,undefined
[10] KU Leuven,undefined
[11] Tohoku University Hospital,undefined
[12] Translational Research Center for Gastrointestinal Disorders (TARGID),undefined
[13] KU Leuven,undefined
[14] University of Gothenburg,undefined
[15] Sahlgrenska University Hospital,undefined
[16] MR Centre,undefined
[17] Dartmouth College,undefined
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摘要
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional disorder of brain-gut interactions. Differential brain responses to rectal distention between IBS and healthy controls (HCs) have been demonstrated, particularly in the pain matrix and the default mode network. This study aims to compare resting-state functional properties of these networks between IBS patients and HCs using graph analysis in two independent cohorts. We used a weighted graph analysis of the adjacency matrix based on partial correlations between time series in the different regions in each subject to determine subject specific graph measures. These graph measures were normalized by values obtained in equivalent random networks. We did not find any significant differences between IBS patients and controls in global normalized graph measures, hubs, or modularity structure of the pain matrix and the DMN in any of our two independent cohorts. Furthermore, we did not find consistent associations between these global network measures and IBS symptom severity or GI-specific anxiety but we found a significant difference in the relationship between measures of psychological distress (anxiety and/or depressive symptoms) and normalized characteristic path length. The responses of these networks to visceral stimulation rather than their organisation at rest may be primarily disturbed in IBS.
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