4.7 Article

Dynamic Changes in Functional Cerebral Connectivity of Spatial Cognition During the Menstrual Cycle

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 32, Issue 10, Pages 1544-1556

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.21126

Keywords

functional magnetic resonance imaging; functional cerebral asymmetries; sex differences; sex hormones; lateralization; progesterone; estradiol

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [STU-263/3-1, HA 3285/4-1, WE 2793/2-1]
  2. medical faculty of the University Aachen [26/06]

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Functional cerebral asymmetries (FCAs) in women have been shown to vary with changing levels of sex hormones during the menstrual cycle. Previous studies have suggested that interhemispheric interaction forms a key component in generating FCAs and it has been shown behaviorally and by functional imaging that interhemispheric interaction changes during the menstrual cycle, at least for a left hemisphere dominant task. We used functional MRI and an analysis of functional connectivity to examine whether changes in right hemisphere advantage for a figure comparison task as found in behavioral studies, are based on comparable mechanisms like those identified for the verbal task. Women were examined three times during the menstrual cycle, during the menstrual, follicular and luteal phases. The behavioral data confirmed the right hemisphere advantage for the figure comparison task as well as changes of the right hemisphere advantage during the menstrual cycle. Imaging data showed cycle phase-related changes in lateralized brain activation within the task-dominant hemisphere and changes in connectivity between nonhomotopic areas of both hemispheres, suggesting that changes in functional brain organization in women during the menstrual cycle are not only restricted to hormone-related changes of interhemispheric inhibition between homotopic areas, as has been proposed earlier, but might additionally apply to changes of neuronal processes within the hemispheres which seem to be modulated by heterotopic functional connectivity between hemispheres. Hum Brain Mapp 32: 1544-1556, 2011. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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