1. Cortical Thinning and Abnormal Structural Covariance Network After Three Hours Sleep Restriction
- Author
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Xinzhong Zhang, Lu Yang, Peng Zhang, Caihong Wang, and Chaoyan Wang
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,graph theory ,RC435-571 ,Biology ,sleep restriction ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Betweenness centrality ,Neuroimaging ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Sleep restriction ,Clustering coefficient ,Original Research ,Psychiatry ,neuroimaging ,structural covariance network ,cortical thickness ,Brodmann area 19 ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Sleep deprivation ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Structural covariance ,medicine.symptom ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sleep loss leads to serious health problems, impaired attention, and emotional processing. It has been suggested that the abnormal neurobehavioral performance after sleep deprivation was involved in dysfunction of specific functional connectivity between brain areas. However, to the best of our knowledge, there was no study investigating the structural connectivity mechanisms underlying the dysfunction at network level. Surface morphological analysis and graph theoretical analysis were employed to investigate changes in cortical thickness following 3 h sleep restriction, and test whether the topological properties of structural covariance network was affected by sleep restriction. We found that sleep restriction significantly decreased cortical thickness in the right parieto-occipital cortex (Brodmann area 19). In addition, graph theoretical analysis revealed significantly enhanced global properties of structural covariance network including clustering coefficient and local efficiency, and increased nodal properties of the left insula cortex including nodal efficiency and betweenness, after 3 h sleep restriction. These results provided insights into understanding structural mechanisms of dysfunction of large-scale functional networks after sleep restriction.
- Published
- 2021