Center for Brain and Cognition (CBC), Department of Information Technologies and Communications (DTIC), Pompeu Fabra University, Edifici Mercè Rodoreda, Carrer Trias i Fargas 25-27, 08005 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
Center for Brain and Cognition (CBC), Department of Information Technologies and Communications (DTIC), Pompeu Fabra University, Edifici Mercè Rodoreda, Carrer Trias i Fargas 25-27, 08005 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain; ViRVIG, University of Girona, Girona, Spain.
Neurobiol Dis. 2024 Oct 1;200:106613. doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2024.106613. Epub 2024 Jul 28.
Focal brain injuries, such as stroke, cause local structural damage as well as alteration of neuronal activity in distant brain regions. Experimental evidence suggests that one of these changes is the appearance of sleep-like slow waves in the otherwise awake individual. This pattern is prominent in areas surrounding the damaged region and can extend to connected brain regions in a way consistent with the individual's specific long-range connectivity patterns. In this paper we present a generative whole-brain model based on (f)MRI data that, in combination with the disconnection mask associated with a given patient, explains the effects of the sleep-like slow waves originated in the vicinity of the lesion area on the distant brain activity. Our model reveals new aspects of their interaction, being able to reproduce functional connectivity patterns of stroke patients and offering a detailed, causal understanding of how stroke-related effects, in particular slow waves, spread throughout the brain. The presented findings demonstrate that the model effectively captures the links between stroke occurrences, sleep-like slow waves, and their subsequent spread across the human brain.
局灶性脑损伤,如中风,会导致局部结构损伤以及远隔脑区神经元活动的改变。实验证据表明,这些变化之一是在原本清醒的个体中出现类似睡眠的慢波。这种模式在损伤区域周围的区域很明显,并且可以以与个体特定的远程连接模式一致的方式扩展到连接的脑区。在本文中,我们提出了一个基于(f)MRI 数据的全脑生成模型,该模型结合与给定患者相关联的断开连接掩模,可以解释起源于病变区域附近的类似睡眠的慢波对远距离脑活动的影响。我们的模型揭示了它们相互作用的新方面,能够再现中风患者的功能连接模式,并提供关于中风相关影响(特别是慢波)如何在整个大脑中传播的详细因果理解。所提出的研究结果表明,该模型有效地捕捉了中风发生、类似睡眠的慢波及其随后在人类大脑中传播之间的联系。