Alterations in the multilayer network in patients with rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder

Author:

Lee Dong Ah1,Lee Won Hee2ORCID,Lee Ho‐Joon3,Park Kang Min1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Haeundae Paik Hospital Inje University College of Medicine Busan Republic of Korea

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Busan Paik Hospital Inje University College of Medicine Busan Republic of Korea

3. Department of Radiology, Haeundae Paik Hospital Inje University College of Medicine Busan Republic of Korea

Abstract

SummaryThis study aimed to reveal the pathophysiology of isolated rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) in patients using multilayer network analysis. Participants eligible for isolated RBD were included and verified via polysomnography. Both iRBD patients and healthy controls underwent brain MRI, including T1‐weighted imaging and diffusion tensor imaging. Grey matter matrix was derived from T1‐weighted images using a morphometric similarity network. White matter matrix was formed from diffusion tensor imaging‐based structural connectivity. Multilayer network analysis of grey and white matter was performed using graph theory. We studied 29 isolated RBD patients and 30 healthy controls. Patients exhibited a higher average overlap degree (27.921 vs. 23.734, p = 0.002) and average multilayer clustering coefficient (0.474 vs. 0.413, p = 0.002) compared with controls. Additionally, several regions showed significant differences in the degree of overlap and multilayer clustering coefficient between patients with isolated RBD and healthy controls at the nodal level. The degree of overlap in the left medial orbitofrontal, left posterior cingulate, and right paracentral nodes and the multilayer clustering coefficients in the left lateral occipital, left rostral middle frontal, right fusiform, right inferior posterior parietal, and right parahippocampal nodes were higher in patients with isolated RBD than in healthy controls. We found alterations in the multilayer network at the global and nodal levels in patients with isolated RBD, and these changes may be associated with the pathophysiology of isolated RBD. Multilayer network analysis can be used widely to explore the mechanisms underlying various neurological disorders.

Publisher

Wiley

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