Biomedical Imaging / Medical Imaging
Farzaneh Keyvanfard; Alireza Rahiminasab; Abbas Nasiraei Moghaddam
Volume 15, Issue 3 , December 2021, , Pages 211-220
Abstract
In brain disorders, both the brain structural and functional connectivity are altered and cause different behavioral symptoms. Recognizing these variations can help us to diagnose, treat, and control its progression. Schizophrenia is one of these mental disorders that widely affects the brain structure ...
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In brain disorders, both the brain structural and functional connectivity are altered and cause different behavioral symptoms. Recognizing these variations can help us to diagnose, treat, and control its progression. Schizophrenia is one of these mental disorders that widely affects the brain structure and function. Investigation of brain variations in this disease has commonly been based on voxel-wise analysis or region-based studies. The aim of this study is to evaluate brain structure and function alterations in schizophrenia patients comparing to healthy control from the brain connectivity perspective. For this purpose, using the statistical test method, a comparison was made between all the structural and functional connections in the brain of 92 healthy individuals and 37 schizophrenia patients obtained from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) respectively. The findings of this study indicate that the number of altered edges in the brain functional network of patients is about 4 times more than the number of varied structural connections, which indicates the high impact of this disorder on brain function. Also, examination of the number of altered edges connected to each node, the affected areas in this disease were identified and it was shown that the schizophrenia patients’ brain has changed in parts of the brain subnetworks related to the default mode network (DMN), attention, somatomotor and vision networks. It was also shown that the altered brain structural connections of patients are involved in the areas of the superior frontal gyrus, temporal gyrus and part of the occipital cortex which are mostly shown relative increasing of the structural connectivity weights. The results of this study indicate the widespread effect of this disorder on the brain and suggest that the occurrence of some abnormal behaviors in schizophrenia patients may be due to some increased structural connectivity weights.