keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565879/environmental-and-sociocultural-factors-are-associated-with-pain-related-brain-structure-among-diverse-individuals-with-chronic-musculoskeletal-pain-intersectional-considerations
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa H Domenico, Jared J Tanner, Angela M Mickle, Ellen L Terry, Cynthia Garvan, Song Lai, Hrishikesh Deshpande, Roland Staud, David Redden, Catherine C Price, Burel R Goodin, Roger B Fillingim, Kimberly T Sibille
Chronic musculoskeletal pain including knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of disability worldwide. Previous research indicates ethnic-race groups differ in the pain and functional limitations experienced with knee OA. However, when socioenvironmental factors are included in analyses, group differences in pain and function wane. Pain-related brain structures are another area where ethnic-race group differences have been observed. Environmental and sociocultural factors e.g., income, education, experiences of discrimination, and social support influence brain structures...
April 2, 2024: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558512/systematic-review-on-effects-of-experimental-orthodontic-tooth-displacement-on-brain-activation-assessed-by-fmri
#22
REVIEW
Gelareh Sadvandi, Amir Ehsan Kianfar, Kathrin Becker, Alexander Heinzel, Michael Wolf, Sareh Said-Yekta Michael
BACKGROUND: Orthodontic treatment is often accompanied by discomfort and pain in patients, which are believed to be a result of orthodontic tooth displacement caused by the mechanical forces exerted by the orthodontic appliances on the periodontal tissues. These lead to change blood oxygen level dependent response in related brain regions. OBJECTIVE: This systematic review aims to assess the impact of experimental orthodontic tooth displacement on alterations in central nervous system activation assessed by tasked based and resting state fMRI...
April 2024: Clinical and Experimental Dental Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552365/abnormal-functional-connectivity-of-the-reward-circuit-associated-with-early-satiety-in-patients-with-postprandial-distress-syndrome
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pan Zhang, Yangke Mao, Liangchao Gao, Zilei Tian, Ruirui Sun, Yuqi He, Peihong Ma, Beihong Dou, Yuan Chen, Xiabing Zhang, Zhaoxuan He, Tao Yin, Fang Zeng
Postprandial distress syndrome (PDS) is the most common functional dyspepsia (FD) subtype. Early satiety is one of the cardinal symptoms of the PDS subtype in FD patients. The heterogeneity of symptoms in FD patients hampered therapy for patients based on specific symptoms, necessitating a symptom-based understanding of the pathophysiology of FD. To investigate the correlation between reward circuit and symptom severity of PDS patients, seed (Nucleus accumbens, NAc, a key node in the reward circuit) based resting-state functional connectivity (FC) was applied in the neuroimaging data analysis...
March 28, 2024: Appetite
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552340/relationship-between-functional-connectivity-and-weight-gain-risk-of-antipsychotics-in-schizophrenia
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Keith Dodd, Kristina T Legget, Marc-Andre Cornier, Andrew M Novick, Maureen McHugo, Brian D Berman, Benjamin P Lawful, Jason R Tregellas
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms by which antipsychotic medications (APs) contribute to obesity in schizophrenia are not well understood. Because AP effects on functional brain connectivity may contribute to weight effects, the current study investigated how AP-associated weight-gain risk relates to functional connectivity in schizophrenia. METHODS: Fifty-five individuals with schizophrenia (final N = 54) were divided into groups based on previously reported AP weight-gain risk (no APs/low risk [N = 19]; moderate risk [N = 17]; high risk [N = 18])...
March 28, 2024: Schizophrenia Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38511349/strategic-lacunes-associated-with-mild-cognitive-impairment-in-rural-chinese-older-adults-a-population-based-study
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiafeng Wang, Xiaodong Han, Yuanjing Li, Wenxin Fa, Mingqing Zhao, Chunyan Li, Ming Mao, Tingting Hou, Yongxiang Wang, Lin Cong, Lin Song, Yifeng Du, Chengxuan Qiu
BACKGROUND: Lacunes are associated with cognitive impairment. We sought to identify strategic lacune locations associated with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and subtypes of MCI among older adults, and further to examine the role of white matter hyperintensities and perivascular spaces in the association. METHODS: This population-based cross-sectional study included 1230 dementia-free participants in the brain magnetic resonance imaging substudy (2018-2020) in MIND-China (Multimodal Interventions to Delay Dementia and Disability in Rural China)...
March 21, 2024: Stroke; a Journal of Cerebral Circulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38497532/graph-theoretical-analysis-and-independent-component-analysis-of-diabetic-optic-neuropathy-a-resting-state-functional-magnetic-resonance-imaging-study
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qian Wei, Si-Min Lin, San-Hua Xu, Jie Zou, Jun Chen, Min Kang, Jin-Yu Hu, Xu-Lin Liao, Hong Wei, Qian Ling, Yi Shao, Yao Yu
AIMS: This study aimed to investigate the resting-state functional connectivity and topologic characteristics of brain networks in patients with diabetic optic neuropathy (DON). METHODS: Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scans were performed on 23 patients and 41 healthy control (HC) subjects. We used independent component analysis and graph theoretical analysis to determine the topologic characteristics of the brain and as well as functional network connectivity (FNC) and topologic properties of brain networks...
March 2024: CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38474800/associations-of-triglycerides-and-atherogenic-index-of-plasma-with-brain-structure-in-the-middle-aged-and-elderly-adults
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xixi Chen, Yujia Bao, Jiahao Zhao, Ziyue Wang, Qijing Gao, Mingyang Ma, Ziwen Xie, Mu He, Xiaobei Deng, Jinjun Ran
Triglyceride (TG) and atherogenic index of plasma (AIP) have been acknowledged to be risk factors for vascular insults, but their impacts on the brain system remain elusive. To fill in some gaps, we investigated associations of TG and AIP with brain structure, leveraging the UK Biobank database. TG and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) were examined at baseline and AIP was calculated as log (TG/HDL-C). We build several linear regression models to estimate associations of TG and AIP with volumes of brain grey matter phenotypes...
February 27, 2024: Nutrients
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38453468/insula-amygdala-and-insula-thalamus-pathways-are-involved-in-comorbid-chronic-pain-and-depression-like-behavior-in-mice
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jing Chen, Yuan Gao, Shu-Ting Bao, Ying-Di Wang, Tao Jia, Cui Yin, Cheng Xiao, Chunyi Zhou
The comorbidity of chronic pain and depression poses tremendous challenges for the treatment of either one because they exacerbate each other with unknown mechanisms. As the posterior insular cortex (PIC) integrates multiple somatosensory and emotional information and is implicated in either chronic pain or depression, we hypothesize that the PIC and its projections may contribute to the pathophysiology of comorbid chronic pain and depression. We show that PIC neurons were readily activated by mechanical, thermal, aversive, and stressful and appetitive stimulation in naïve and neuropathic pain male mice subjected to spared nerve injury (SNI)...
March 7, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38410619/long-range-connections-damage-in-white-matter-hyperintensities-affects-information-processing-speed
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tong Lu, Zan Wang, Yixin Zhu, Mengxue Wang, Chun-Qiang Lu, Shenghong Ju
White matter hyperintensities, one of the major markers of cerebral small vessel disease, disrupt the integrity of neuronal networks and ultimately contribute to cognitive dysfunction. However, a deeper understanding of how white matter hyperintensities related to the connectivity patterns of brain hubs at the neural network level could provide valuable insights into the relationship between white matter hyperintensities and cognitive dysfunction. A total of 36 patients with moderate to severe white matter hyperintensities (Fazekas score ≥ 3) and 34 healthy controls underwent comprehensive neuropsychological assessments and resting-state functional MRI scans...
2024: Brain communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38382693/functional-and-structural-abnormalities-in-the-pain-network-of-generalized-anxiety-disorder-patients-with-pain-symptoms
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jie Meng, Ting Zhang, Tong Hao, Xiaohui Xie, Mengdan Zhang, Lei Zhang, Xingsong Wan, Chunyan Zhu, Qianqian Li, Kai Wang
Pain symptoms significantly impact the well-being and work capacity of individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and hinder treatment and recovery. Despite existing literature focusing on the neural substrate of pain and anxiety separately, further exploration is needed to understand the possible neuroimaging mechanisms of the pain symptoms in GAD patients. We recruited 73 GAD patients and 75 matched healthy controls (HC) for clinical assessments, as well as resting-state functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging scans...
February 19, 2024: Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38373518/neural-mechanisms-of-odour-imagery-induced-by-non-figurative-visual-cues
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriela Hossu, Luca Fantin, CĂ©line Charroud, Jacques Felblinger, Muriel Jacquot, Hadrien Ceyte
Odour imagery, the ability to experience smell when an appropriate stimulus is absent, has widely been documented as being particularly difficult. However, previous studies have shown the beneficial effect of visual cues (e.g., pictures or words) to facilitate performance in numerous tasks of olfactory nature. Therefore, the use of visual cues to evoke odours seems relevant. In this study, our interest is directed towards non-figurative coloured arrangements, which result from a patented technology and aim at chromatically representing any smell from its chemical composition and sensory description...
February 17, 2024: Neuropsychologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38367321/adverse-childhood-experiences-differently-affect-theory-of-mind-brain-networks-in-schizophrenia-and-healthy-controls
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benedetta Vai, Federico Calesella, Alice Pelucchi, Martina Riberto, Sara Poletti, Margherita Bechi, Roberto Cavallaro, Benedetti Francesco
Patients with schizophrenia (SZ) show impairments in both affective and cognitive dimensions of theory of mind (ToM). SZ are also particularly vulnerable to detrimental effect of adverse childhood experiences (ACE), influencing the overall course of the disorder and fostering poor social functioning. ACE associate with long-lasting detrimental effects on brain structure, function, and connectivity in regions involved in ToM. Here, we investigated whether ToM networks are differentially affected by ACEs in healthy controls (HC) and SZ, and if these effects can predict the disorder clinical outcome...
February 14, 2024: Journal of Psychiatric Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38343312/from-software-to-hardware-a-case-series-of-functional-neurological-symptoms-and-cerebrovascular-disease
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan Coebergh, Shabana Habib, Tiago Teodoro, Mark Edwards, Matt Butler
OBJECTIVE: Neuroimaging studies have identified alterations in both brain structure and functional connectivity in patients with functional neurological disorder (FND). For many patients, FND emerges from physical precipitating events. Nevertheless, there are a limited number of case series in the literature that describe the clinical presentation and neuroimaging correlates of FND following cerebrovascular disease. METHODS: The authors collected data from two clinics in the United Kingdom on 14 cases of acute, improving, or delayed functional neurological symptoms following cerebrovascular events...
February 12, 2024: Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38339823/age-related-positive-emotional-reactivity-decline-associated-with-the-anterior-insula-based-resting-state-functional-connectivity
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lijing Niu, Xiaoqi Song, Qian Li, Lanxin Peng, Haowei Dai, Jiayuan Zhang, Keyin Chen, Tatia M C Lee, Ruibin Zhang
Recent studies have suggested that emotional reactivity changes with age, but the neural basis is still unclear. The insula may be critical for the emotional reactivity. The current study examined how ageing affects emotional reactivity using the emotional reactivity task data from a human sample (Cambridge Center for Age and Neuroscience, N = 243, age 18-88 years). The resting-state magnetic resonance measurements from the same sample were used to investigate the potential mechanisms of the insula...
February 1, 2024: Human Brain Mapping
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331939/time-sensitive-changes-in-the-maternal-brain-and-their-influence-on-mother-child-attachment
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susanne Nehls, Elena Losse, Christian Enzensberger, Thomas Frodl, Natalia Chechko
Pregnancy and the postpartum period are characterized by an increased neuroplasticity in the maternal brain. To explore the dynamics of postpartum changes in gray matter volume (GMV), magnetic resonance imaging was performed on 20 healthy postpartum women immediately after childbirth and at 3-week intervals for 12 postpartum weeks. The control group comprised 20 age-matched nulliparous women. The first 6 postpartum weeks (constituting the subacute postpartum period) are associated with decreasing progesterone levels and a massive restructuring in GMV, affecting the amygdala/hippocampus, the prefrontal/subgenual cortex, and the insula, which approach their sizes in nulliparous women only around weeks 3-6 postpartum...
February 9, 2024: Translational Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38326458/brain-connectivity-changes-to-fast-versus-slow-dopamine-increases
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Manza, Dardo Tomasi, Leah Vines, Diana Sotelo, Michele-Vera Yonga, Gene-Jack Wang, Nora D Volkow
The rewarding effects of stimulant drugs such as methylphenidate (MP) depend crucially on how fast they raise dopamine in the brain. Yet how the rate of drug-induced dopamine increases impacts brain network communication remains unresolved. We manipulated route of MP administration to generate fast versus slow dopamine increases. We hypothesized that fast versus slow dopamine increases would result in a differential pattern of global brain connectivity (GBC) in association with regional levels of dopamine D1 receptors, which are critical for drug reward...
February 7, 2024: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38323007/the-dual-facilitatory-and-inhibitory-effects-of-social-pain-on-physical-pain-perception
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ming Zhang, Xiaomin Lin, Yongkang Zhi, Yan Mu, Yazhuo Kong
Pain is a multi-dimensional phenomenon that encompasses both physical pain experienced physiologically and social pain experienced emotionally. The interactions between them are thought to lead to increased pain load. However, the effect of social pain on physical pain perception during interactions remains unclear. Four experiments were conducted merging physical and social pains to examine the behavioral pattern and neural mechanism of the effect of social pain on physical pain perception. Seemingly paradoxical effects of social pain were observed, which both facilitated and inhibited physical pain perception under different attention orientations...
February 16, 2024: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38313264/relationship-between-neuroimaging-and-cognition-in-frontotemporal-dementia-a-18-f-fdg-pet-and-structural-mri-study
#38
Salih Cayir, Tommaso Volpi, Takuya Toyonaga, Jean-Dominique Gallezot, Yang Yanghong, Faranak Ebrahimian Sadabad, Tim Mulnix, Adam P Mecca, Arman Fesharaki-Zadeh, David Matuskey
Background Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinically and pathologically heterogeneous condition with a prevalence comparable to Alzheimer's Disease for patients under sixty-five years of age. Gray matter (GM) atrophy and glucose hypometabolism are important biomarkers for the diagnosis and evaluation of disease progression in FTD. However, limited studies have systematically examined the association between cognition and neuroimaging in FTD using different imaging modalities in the same patient group. Methods We examined the association of cognition using Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) with both GM volume and glucose metabolism using structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography scanning ([ 18 F]FDG PET) in 21 patients diagnosed with FTD...
January 15, 2024: Research Square
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38305691/impaired-value-based-decision-making-in-parkinson-s-disease-apathy
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William Gilmour, Graeme Mackenzie, Mathias Feile, Louise Tayler-Grint, Szabolcs Suveges, Jennifer A Macfarlane, Angus D Macleod, Vicky Marshall, Iris Q Grunwald, J Douglas Steele, Tom Gilbertson
Apathy is a common and disabling complication of Parkinson's disease characterised by reduced goal-directed behaviour. Several studies have reported dysfunction within prefrontal cortical regions and projections from brainstem nuclei whose neuromodulators include dopamine, serotonin and noradrenaline. Work in animal and human neuroscience have confirmed contributions of these neuromodulators on aspects of motivated decision making. Specifically, these neuromodulators have overlapping contributions to encoding the value of decisions, and influence whether to explore alternative courses of action, or persist in an existing strategy to achieve a rewarding goal...
February 2, 2024: Brain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38289534/ocrelizumab-reduces-cortical-and-deep-grey-matter-loss-compared-to-the-s1p-receptor-modulator-in-multiple-sclerosis
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Albulena Bajrami, Agnese Tamanti, Angela Peloso, Stefano Ziccardi, Maddalena Guandalini, Milena Calderone, Marco Castellaro, Francesca B Pizzini, Stefania Montemezzi, Damiano Marastoni, Massimiliano Calabrese
INTRODUCTION: Ocrelizumab (OCR) and Fingolimod (FGL) are two high-efficacy treatments in multiple sclerosis which, besides their strong anti-inflammatory activity, may limit neurodegeneration. AIM: To compare the effect of OCR and FGL on clinical and MRI endpoints. METHODS: 95 relapsing-remitting patients (57 OCR, 38 FGL) clinically followed for 36 months underwent a 3-Tesla MRI at baseline and after 24 months. The annualized relapse rate, EDSS, new cortical/white matter lesions and regional cortical and deep grey matter volume loss were evaluated...
January 30, 2024: Journal of Neurology
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