Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.

Background: It is now possible to map neural connections in vivo across the whole brain (i.e., the brain connectome). This is a promising development in neuroscience since many health and disease processes are believed to arise from the architecture of neural networks.<br/>Objective: To desc...

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Main Authors: Leonardo eBonilha, Travis eNesland, Chris eRorden, Julius eFridriksson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00186/full
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spelling doaj-6ebde126481e4d929fb7c15023c3795c2020-11-24T21:40:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402014-01-01410.3389/fpsyt.2013.0018670836Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.Leonardo eBonilha0Travis eNesland1Chris eRorden2Julius eFridriksson3Medical University of South CarolinaMedical University of South CarolinaUniversity of South CarolinaUniversity of South CarolinaBackground: It is now possible to map neural connections in vivo across the whole brain (i.e., the brain connectome). This is a promising development in neuroscience since many health and disease processes are believed to arise from the architecture of neural networks.<br/>Objective: To describe the normal range of hemispheric asymmetry in structural connectivity in healthy older adults.<br/>Methods: We obtained high-resolution structural magnetic resonance images (MRI) from 17 healthy older adults. For each subject, the brain connectome was reconstructed by parcelating the probabilistic map of gray matter into anatomically defined regions of interested (ROIs). White matter fiber tractography was reconstructed from diffusion tensor imaging and streamlines connecting gray matter ROIs were computed. Asymmetry indices were calculated regarding ROI connectivity (representing the sum of connectivity weight of each cortical ROI) and for regional white matter links. All asymmetry measures were compared to a normal distribution with mean=0 through one sample t-tests.<br/>Results: Leftward cortical ROI asymmetry was observed in medial temporal, dorsolateral frontal and occipital regions. Rightward cortical ROI asymmetry was observed in middle temporal and orbito-frontal regions. Link-wise asymmetry revealed stronger connections in the left hemisphere between the medial temporal, anterior and posterior peri-Sylvian and occipito-temporal regions. Rightward link asymmetry was observed in lateral temporal, parietal and dorsolateral frontal connections.<br/>Conclusions: We postulate that asymmetry of specific connections may be related to functional hemispheric organization. This study may provide reference for future studies evaluating the architecture of the connectome in health and disease processes in senior individuals.<br/>http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00186/fullAgingDiffusion Tensor Imagingasymmetryconnectivitystructural connectome
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonardo eBonilha
Travis eNesland
Chris eRorden
Julius eFridriksson
spellingShingle Leonardo eBonilha
Travis eNesland
Chris eRorden
Julius eFridriksson
Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Aging
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
asymmetry
connectivity
structural connectome
author_facet Leonardo eBonilha
Travis eNesland
Chris eRorden
Julius eFridriksson
author_sort Leonardo eBonilha
title Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
title_short Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
title_full Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
title_fullStr Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
title_full_unstemmed Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
title_sort asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Background: It is now possible to map neural connections in vivo across the whole brain (i.e., the brain connectome). This is a promising development in neuroscience since many health and disease processes are believed to arise from the architecture of neural networks.<br/>Objective: To describe the normal range of hemispheric asymmetry in structural connectivity in healthy older adults.<br/>Methods: We obtained high-resolution structural magnetic resonance images (MRI) from 17 healthy older adults. For each subject, the brain connectome was reconstructed by parcelating the probabilistic map of gray matter into anatomically defined regions of interested (ROIs). White matter fiber tractography was reconstructed from diffusion tensor imaging and streamlines connecting gray matter ROIs were computed. Asymmetry indices were calculated regarding ROI connectivity (representing the sum of connectivity weight of each cortical ROI) and for regional white matter links. All asymmetry measures were compared to a normal distribution with mean=0 through one sample t-tests.<br/>Results: Leftward cortical ROI asymmetry was observed in medial temporal, dorsolateral frontal and occipital regions. Rightward cortical ROI asymmetry was observed in middle temporal and orbito-frontal regions. Link-wise asymmetry revealed stronger connections in the left hemisphere between the medial temporal, anterior and posterior peri-Sylvian and occipito-temporal regions. Rightward link asymmetry was observed in lateral temporal, parietal and dorsolateral frontal connections.<br/>Conclusions: We postulate that asymmetry of specific connections may be related to functional hemispheric organization. This study may provide reference for future studies evaluating the architecture of the connectome in health and disease processes in senior individuals.<br/>
topic Aging
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
asymmetry
connectivity
structural connectome
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00186/full
work_keys_str_mv AT leonardoebonilha asymmetryofthestructuralbrainconnectomeinhealthyolderadults
AT travisenesland asymmetryofthestructuralbrainconnectomeinhealthyolderadults
AT chriserorden asymmetryofthestructuralbrainconnectomeinhealthyolderadults
AT juliusefridriksson asymmetryofthestructuralbrainconnectomeinhealthyolderadults
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