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Cross-modality comparison between structural and metabolic networks in individual brain based on the Jensen-Shannon divergence method: a healthy Chinese population study.

Authors :
Li, Yu-Lin
Zheng, Mou-Xiong
Hua, Xu-Yun
Gao, Xin
Wu, Jia-Jia
Shan, Chun-Lei
Zhang, Jun-Peng
Wei, Dong
Xu, Jian-Guang
Source :
Brain Structure & Function; May2023, Vol. 228 Issue 3/4, p761-773, 13p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The study aimed to investigate the consistency and diversity between metabolic and structural brain networks at individual level constructed with divergence-based method in healthy Chinese population. The <superscript>18</superscript>F-FDG PET and T1-weighted images of brain were collected from 209 healthy participants. The Jensen-Shannon divergence (JSD) was used to calculate metabolic or structural connectivities between any pair of brain regions and then individual brain networks were constructed. The global and regional topological properties of both networks were analyzed with graph theoretical analysis. Regional properties including nodal efficiency, degree, and betweenness centrality were used to define hub regions of networks. Cross-modality similarity of brain connectivity was analyzed with differential power (DP) analysis. The default mode network (DMN) had the largest number of brain connectivities with high DP values. The small-worldness indexes of metabolic and structural networks in all participants were greater than 1. The structural network showed higher assortativity and local efficiency than metabolic network, while hierarchy and global efficiency were greater in the metabolic network (all P < 0.001). Most of hubs in both networks were symmetrically spatial distributed in the regions of the DMN and subcortical nuclei including thalamus and amygdala, etc. The human brain presented small-world architecture both in perspective of individual metabolic and structural networks. There was a structural substrate that supported the brain to globally and efficiently integrate and process metabolic interaction across brain regions. The cross-modality cooperation or specialization in both networks might imply mechanisms of achieving higher-order brain functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18632653
Volume :
228
Issue :
3/4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Brain Structure & Function
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163414564
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00429-023-02616-z