4.7 Article

Discrete Patterns of Cross-Hemispheric Functional Connectivity Underlie Impairments of Spatial Cognition after Stroke

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 34, Pages 6638-6648

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0625-20.2020

Keywords

attention network; functional connectivity; parietal lobe; spatial cognition; spatial neglect; visual attention

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [32003B-184702, 320030175472]
  2. Novartis Foundation for Medical-Biological Research [16C183]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [32003B_184702] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Despite intense research, the neural correlates of stroke-induced deficits of spatial cognition remain controversial. For example, several cortical regions and white-matter tracts have been designated as possible anatomic predictors of spatial neglect. However, many studies focused on local anatomy, an approach that does not harmonize with the notion that brain-behavior relationships are flexible and may involve interactions among distant regions. We studied in humans of either sex restingstate fMRI connectivity associated with performance in line bisection, reading and visual search, tasks commonly used for he dinical diagnosis of neglect. We defined left and right frontal, parietal, and temporal areas as seeds (or regions of interest, ROIs), and measured whole-brain seed-based functional connectivity (FC) and ROI-to-ROI connectivity in subacute right-hemisphere stroke patients. Performance on the line bisection task was associated with decreased FC between the right fusiform gyrus and left superior occipital cortex. Complementary increases and decreases of connectivity between both temporal and occipital lobes predicted reading errors. In addition, visual search deficits were associated with modifications of FC between left and right inferior parietal lobes and right insular cortex. These distinct connectivity patterns were substantiated by analyses of FC between left- and right-hemispheric ROIs, which revealed that decreased interhemispheric and right intrahemispheric FC was associated with higher levels of impairment. Together, these findings indicate that intrahemispheric and interhemispheric cooperation between brain regions lying outside the damaged area contributes to spatial deficits in a way that depends on the different cognitive components recruited during reading, spatial judgments, and visual exploration.

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