4.7 Article

Delayed access to conscious processing in multiple sclerosis: Reduced cortical activation and impaired structural connectivity

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 42, Issue 11, Pages 3379-3395

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25440

Keywords

(un)consciousness; anterior visual system; functional magnetic resonance imaging; multiple sclerosis; optical coherence tomography; structural connectivity; visual backward masking paradigm

Funding

  1. Genzyme
  2. Projekt DEAL

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The study found that patients with multiple sclerosis have slower conscious access to visual stimulus material, with a complex pattern of functional and structural alterations. Compared to healthy controls, patients showed decreased brain activation during unconscious processing.
Although multiple sclerosis (MS) is frequently accompanied by visuo-cognitive impairment, especially functional brain mechanisms underlying this impairment are still not well understood. Consequently, we used a functional MRI (fMRI) backward masking task to study visual information processing stratifying unconscious and conscious in MS. Specifically, 30 persons with MS (pwMS) and 34 healthy controls (HC) were shown target stimuli followed by a mask presented 8-150 ms later and had to compare the target to a reference stimulus. Retinal integrity (via optical coherence tomography), optic tract integrity (visual evoked potential; VEP) and whole brain structural connectivity (probabilistic tractography) were assessed as complementary structural brain integrity markers. On a psychophysical level, pwMS reached conscious access later than HC (50 vs. 16 ms, p < .001). The delay increased with disease duration (p < .001, beta = .37) and disability (p < .001, beta = .24), but did not correlate with conscious information processing speed (Symbol digit modality test, beta = .07, p = .817). No association was found for VEP and retinal integrity markers. Moreover, pwMS were characterized by decreased brain activation during unconscious processing compared with HC. No group differences were found during conscious processing. Finally, a complementary structural brain integrity analysis showed that a reduced fractional anisotropy in corpus callosum and an impaired connection between right insula and primary visual areas was related to delayed conscious access in pwMS. Our study revealed slowed conscious access to visual stimulus material in MS and a complex pattern of functional and structural alterations coupled to unconscious processing of/delayed conscious access to visual stimulus material in MS.

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