Chen Ji, Li Jinqiang, Han Qiaoqing, Lin Jianzhong, Yang Tianhe, Chen Ziqian, Zhang Jiaxing
Department of Medical Imaging Fuzhou Dongfang Hospital Xiamen University Fuzhou Fujian China; Department of Physiology and Neurobiology Medical College of Xiamen University Xiamen Fujian China.
Department of Clinical Psychology Gulangyu Sanatorium of PLA Xiamen Fujian China.
Brain Behav. 2016 Jun 27;6(9):e00512. doi: 10.1002/brb3.512. eCollection 2016 Sep.
Structural and functional networks can be reorganized to adjust to environmental pressures and physiologic changes in the adult brain, but such processes remain unclear in prolonged adaptation to high-altitude (HA) hypoxia. This study aimed to characterize the interhemispheric functionally and structurally coupled modifications in the brains of adult HA immigrants.
We performed resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in 16 adults who had immigrated to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (2300-4400 m) for 2 years and in 16 age-matched sea-level (SL) controls. A recently validated approach of voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity (VMHC) was employed to examine the interhemispheric resting-state functional connectivity. Areas showing changed VMHC in HA immigrants were selected as regions of interest for follow-up DTI tractography analysis. The fiber parameters of fractional anisotropy and fiber length were obtained. Cognitive and physiological assessments were made and correlated with the resulting image metrics.
Compared with SL controls, VMHC in the bilateral visual cortex was significantly increased in HA immigrants. The mean VMHC value extracted within the visual cortex was positively correlated with hemoglobin concentration. Moreover, the path length of the commissural fibers connecting homotopic visual areas was increased in HA immigrants, covarying positively with VMHC.
These observations are the first to demonstrate interhemispheric functional and structural connectivity resilience in the adult brain after prolonged HA acclimatization independent of inherited and developmental effects, and the coupled modifications in the bilateral visual cortex indicate important neural compensatory mechanisms underlying visual dysfunction in physiologically well-acclimatized HA immigrants. The study of human central adaptation to extreme environments promotes the understanding of our brain's capacity for survival.
在成人大脑中,结构和功能网络可进行重组以适应环境压力和生理变化,但在长期适应高海拔(HA)缺氧的过程中,这些过程仍不清楚。本研究旨在描述成年HA移民大脑半球间功能和结构耦合的变化。
我们对16名已移民到青藏高原(海拔2300 - 4400米)两年的成年人以及16名年龄匹配的海平面(SL)对照者进行了静息态功能磁共振成像(fMRI)和扩散张量成像(DTI)。采用一种最近验证的体素镜像同伦连接性(VMHC)方法来检查半球间静息态功能连接性。将HA移民中显示VMHC变化的区域选为感兴趣区域,用于后续的DTI纤维束成像分析。获得了分数各向异性和纤维长度的纤维参数。进行了认知和生理评估,并将其与所得图像指标相关联。
与SL对照者相比,HA移民双侧视觉皮层的VMHC显著增加。在视觉皮层内提取的平均VMHC值与血红蛋白浓度呈正相关。此外,HA移民中连接同伦视觉区域的连合纤维的路径长度增加,与VMHC呈正相关。
这些观察结果首次证明了成年大脑在长期HA适应后半球间功能和结构连接的弹性,且不受遗传和发育影响,双侧视觉皮层的耦合变化表明在生理上适应良好的HA移民视觉功能障碍背后存在重要的神经补偿机制。对人类中枢适应极端环境的研究有助于增进对我们大脑生存能力的理解。