Posterior cingulate cross-hemispheric functional connectivity predicts the level of consciousness in traumatic brain injury

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作者
Haosu Zhang
Rui Dai
Pengmin Qin
Weijun Tang
Jin Hu
Xuchu Weng
Xing Wu
Ying Mao
Xuehai Wu
Georg Northoff
机构
[1] Huashan Hospital of Fudan University,Department of Neurosurgery
[2] Hangzhou Normal University. NO. 19#3 Shuyuan,Center for Cognition and Brain Disorders (CCBD)
[3] University of Ottawa,Institute of Mental Health Research
[4] Key Laboratory of Ecology and Environmental Science in Higher Education of Guangdong Province,School of Life Science, South China Normal University
[5] South China Normal University,Guangdong Key Laboratory of Mental Health and Cognitive Science
[6] South China Normal University,Centre for Studies of Psychological Applications
[7] South China Normal University,School of Psychology
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摘要
Previous studies have demonstrated that altered states of consciousness are related to changes in resting state activity in the default-mode network (DMN). Anatomically, the DMN can be divided into anterior and posterior regions. The anterior DMN includes the perigenual anterior cingulate cortex and other medial prefrontal cortical regions, whereas the posterior DMN includes regions such as the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) and the temporal parietal junction (TPJ). Although differential roles have been attributed to the anterior and posterior DMN regions, their exact contributions to consciousness levels remain unclear. To investigate the specific role of the posterior DMN in consciousness levels, we investigated 20 healthy controls (7 females, mean age = 33.6 years old) and 20 traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients (5 females, mean age = 43 years old) whose brain lesions were mainly restricted to the bilateral frontal cortex but retained a well-preserved posterior DMN (e.g., the PCC and the TPJ) and who exhibited varying levels of consciousness. We investigated the intra- and cross-functional connectivity strengths (FCSs) between the right/left PCC and the right/left TPJ and their correlation with consciousness levels. Significant reductions in both the intra- and cross-hemispheric FCSs were observed in patients compared with controls. A significant correlation with consciousness levels was observed only for the cross-hemispheric PCC-TPJ FCS but not for the intra-hemispheric PCC-TPJ FCS. Taken together, our results show that the cross-hemispheric posterior DMN is related to consciousness levels in a specific group of patients without posterior structural lesions. We therefore propose that the PCC may be central in maintaining consciousness through its cross-hemispheric FC with the TPJ.
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