Whole‐brain analyses indicate the impairment of posterior integration and thalamo‐frontotemporal broadcasting in disorders of consciousness

Author:

Panda Rajanikant12ORCID,López‐González Ane3,Gilson Matthieu34,Gosseries Olivia12,Thibaut Aurore12,Frasso Gianluca5,Cecconi Benedetta12,Escrichs Anira3,Deco Gustavo3678,Laureys Steven129,Zamora‐López Gorka3,Annen Jitka12,

Affiliation:

1. Coma Science Group, GIGA‐Consciousness University of Liège Liège Belgium

2. University Hospital of Liège Liège Belgium

3. Center for Brain and Cognition, Department of Information and Communication Technologies Pompeu Fabra University Barcelona Spain

4. Institut des Neurosciences des Systemes, INSERM‐AMU Marseille France

5. Wageningen Food Safety Research Wageningen The Netherlands

6. Institució Catalana de la Recerça i Estudis Avançats (ICREA) Barcelona Catalonia Spain

7. Department of Neuropsychology Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig Germany

8. School of Psychological Sciences Monash University Victoria Australia

9. CERVO Research Center Laval University Québec Quebec Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe study of the brain's dynamical activity is opening a window to help the clinical assessment of patients with disorders of consciousness. For example, glucose uptake and the dysfunctional spread of naturalistic and synthetic stimuli has proven useful to characterize hampered consciousness. However, understanding of the mechanisms behind loss of consciousness following brain injury is still missing. Here, we study the propagation of endogenous and in‐silico exogenous perturbations in patients with disorders of consciousness, based upon directed and causal interactions estimated from resting‐state fMRI data, fitted to a linear model of activity propagation. We found that patients with disorders of consciousness suffer decreased capacity for neural propagation and responsiveness to events, and that this can be related to severe reduction of glucose metabolism as measured with [18F]FDG‐PET. In particular, we show that loss of consciousness is related to the malfunctioning of two neural circuits: the posterior cortical regions failing to convey information, in conjunction with reduced broadcasting of information from subcortical, temporal, parietal and frontal regions. These results shed light on the mechanisms behind disorders of consciousness, triangulating network function with basic measures of brain integrity and behavior.

Funder

AstraZeneca Foundation

Belgian Federal Science Policy Office

European Space Agency

Fonds Léon Fredericq

Fundação Bial

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology,Anatomy

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