Multimodal assessment shows misalignment of structural and functional thalamocortical connectivity in children and adolescents born very preterm
Creators
- 1. Boston Children's Hospital
- 2. ETH Zurich
- 3. University of Zurich
Description
Thalamocortical connections are altered following very preterm birth but it is unknown whether structural and functional alterations are linked and how they contribute to neurodevelopmental deficits. We used a multimodal approach in 27 very preterm and 35 term-born children and adolescents aged 10 to 16 years: Structural thalamocortical connectivity was quantified with two measures derived from probabilistic tractography of diffusion tensor data, namely the volume of thalamic segments with cortical connections and mean fractional anisotropy (FA) within the respective segments. High-density sleep EEG was recorded and sleep spindles were identified at each electrode. Sleep spindle density and integrated spindle activity (ISA) were calculated to quantify functional thalamocortical connectivity. In term-born participants, the volume of the global thalamic segment with cortical connections was strongly related to sleep spindles across the entire head (mean r = .53 ± .10; range = .35 to .78). Regionally, the volume of the thalamic segment connecting to frontal brain regions correlated with sleep spindle density in two clusters of electrodes over fronto-temporal brain regions (.42 ± .06; .35 to .51 and .43 ± .08; .35 to .62) and the volume of the thalamic segment connecting to parietal brain regions correlated with sleep spindle density over parietal brain regions (mean r = .43 ± .07; .35 to .61). In very preterm participants, the volume of the thalamic segments was not associated with sleep spindles. In the very preterm group, mean FA within the global thalamic segment was negatively correlated with ISA over a cluster of frontal and temporo-occipital brain regions (mean r = -.53 ± .07; -.41 to -.72). No association between mean FA and ISA was found in the term-born group. With this multimodal study protocol, we identified a potential misalignment between structural and functional thalamocortical connectivity in children and adolescents born very preterm. Eventually, this may shed further light on the neuronal mechanisms underlying neurodevelopmental sequelae of preterm birth.
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Persistent Identifiers
Funding
References
Jenkinson . Improved optimization for the robust and accurate linear registratio...
Read more
000-784-845-784-344
Read more
van den Heuvel . The neonatal connectome during preterm brain development, Cereb...
Read more
Jenkinson . A\u00a0global optimisation method for robust affine registration of ...
Read more
Ferrarelli . Thalamic dysfunction in schizophrenia suggested by whole-night defi...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 86 references.
Scholarly Citations
MeSH Terms
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary for indexing biomedical articles.
Click any term to view its definition and hierarchy.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization