4.7 Article

Structural white matter connectometry of reading and dyslexia

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 241, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118411

Keywords

Dyslexia; Reading; Phonological processing; Structural connectometry; DTI

Funding

  1. Finnish Cultural Foundation [191230]
  2. Orion Research Foundation sr
  3. Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation
  4. Academy of Finland [276414, 316970]
  5. Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
  6. Academy of Finland (AKA) [316970, 316970] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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This study utilized a hodological approach to investigate the relationships between structural white matter connectivity and reading skills and phonological processing. The findings revealed specific brain regions associated with reading skills and phonological processing, as well as structural connectivity anomalies in dyslexics.
Current views on the neural network subserving reading and its deficits in dyslexia rely largely on evidence derived from functional neuroimaging studies. However, understanding the structural organization of reading and its aberrations in dyslexia requires a hodological approach, studies of which have not provided consistent findings. Here, we adopted a whole brain hodological approach and investigated relationships between structural white matter connectivity and reading skills and phonological processing in a cross-sectional study of 44 adults using individual local connectome matrix from diffusion MRI data. Moreover, we performed quantitative anisotropy aided differential tractography to uncover structural white matter anomalies in dyslexia (23 dyslexics and 21 matched controls) and their correlation to reading-related skills. The connectometry analyses indicated that reading skills and phonological processing were both associated with corpus callosum (tapetum), forceps major and minor, as well as cerebellum bilaterally. Furthermore, the left dorsal and right thalamic pathways were associated with phonological processing. Differential tractography analyses revealed structural white matter anomalies in dyslexics in the left ventral route and bilaterally in the dorsal route compared to the controls. Connectivity deficits were also observed in the corpus callosum, forceps major, vertical occipital fasciculus and corticostriatal and thalamic pathways. Altered structural connectivity in the observed differential tractography results correlated with poor reading skills and phonological processing. Using a hodological approach, the current study provides novel evidence for the extent of the reading-related connectome and its aberrations in dyslexia. The results conform current functional neuroanatomical models of reading and developmental dyslexia but provide novel network-level and tract-level evidence on structural connectivity anomalies in dyslexia, including the vertical occipital fasciculus.

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