Similarity between structural and proxy estimates of brain connectivity

Author:

Lizarraga Aldana1,Ripp Isabelle1ORCID,Sala Arianna12,Shi Kuangyu3,Düring Marco4,Koch Kathrin5,Yakushev Igor1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nuclear Medicine, School of Medicine, Klinikum Rechts der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany

2. Coma Science Group, GIGA Consciousness, University of Liege; Centre du Cerveau2, University Hospital of Liege, Avenue de L'Hôpital 1, Liege, Belgium

3. Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Bern, Bern, Switzerland

4. Medical Image Analysis Center (MIAC AG) and Qbig, Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

5. Department of Neuroradiology, School of Medicine, Klinikum Rechts der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance and diffusion weighted imaging have so far made a major contribution to delineation of the brain connectome at the macroscale. While functional connectivity (FC) was shown to be related to structural connectivity (SC) to a certain degree, their spatial overlap is unknown. Even less clear are relations of SC with estimates of connectivity from inter-subject covariance of regional F18-fluorodeoxyglucose uptake (FDGcov) and grey matter volume (GMVcov). Here, we asked to what extent SC underlies three proxy estimates of brain connectivity: FC, FDGcov and GMVcov. Simultaneous PET/MR acquisitions were performed in 56 healthy middle-aged individuals. Similarity between four networks was assessed using Spearman correlation and convergence ratio (CR), a measure of spatial overlap. Spearman correlation coefficient was 0.27 for SC-FC, 0.40 for SC-FDGcov, and 0.15 for SC-GMVcov. Mean CRs were 51% for SC-FC, 48% for SC-FDGcov, and 37% for SC-GMVcov. These results proved to be reproducible and robust against image processing steps. In sum, we found a relevant similarity of SC with FC and FDGcov, while GMVcov consistently showed the weakest similarity. These findings indicate that white matter tracts underlie FDGcov to a similar degree as FC, supporting FDGcov as estimate of functional brain connectivity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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