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1/33ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014 Functional connectivity: Diseases of connectivity Gwenaëlle Douaud FMRIB, University of Oxford
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2/33 schizophreniaAlzheimer’sParkinson’schronic paindepression Diseases of connectivity or disconnection? Lesion/degeneration/synaptic malfunction structural connectivity functional connectivity (e.g., Cabral et al., 2012): Abnormal functional connectivity in Functional connectivity impairment disconnection syndrome, where “damage to the connection results in deficit that is dinstinct both from damage to the target and source regions” (Kleinschmidt & Vuilleumier, 2013) Rusconi et al., 2009 Gerstmann syndrome: acalculia +finger agnosia +left-right disorientation +agraphia ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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3/33 Resting-state fMRI: advantages Increased signal-to-noise ratio (Fox & Greicius, Review 2010): - at best, task-related modulation explains 20% of BOLD variance - spontaneous ongoing activity explains 50-80% of BOLD variance ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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4/33 Resting-state fMRI: advantages Covers the entire repertoire of functional networks used by the brain in “action” (Smith et al., 2009) RSN: 36 healthy subjectsfMRI: ~7,300 maps, ~30,000 subjects ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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5/33 Resting-state fMRI: advantages Allows for a broader sampling of patient populations asleep, sedated, too impaired for task-based fMRI scanning, etc. Is not confounded by task performance, effort, practice effects, etc. Greicius et al., 2008 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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6/33 “Rest” is a task state in itself, with potential performance differences, rather than differences in the underlying, stable brain organisation (Buckner et al., 2008, 2013) Might still reveal some meaningful differences, just need careful interpretation Resting-state fMRI: inconvenients “Rest” is a task state in itself, with potential performance differences, rather than differences in the underlying, stable brain organisation (Buckner et al., 2008, 2013) Might still reveal some meaningful differences, just need careful interpretation More susceptible to movement confounds: add motion parameters as covariate use ICA+FIX (automatic denoising using FSL tools: Salimi-Khorshidi et al., 2014, Griffanti et al., 2014) ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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7/33 Interpretation: - no causality information (yet) effective functional connectivity - no easy interpretation what (a change in) + and – correlations mean Resting-state fMRI: inconvenients Smith et al., 2013 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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8/33 Resting-state fMRI in disease: reviews Mild cognitive impairment/Alzheimer’s disease: - Dennis & Thompson, 2014 - Sheline & Raichle, 2013 Movement disorders (esp. Parkinson’s disease): - Poston & Eidelberg, 2012 Psychiatric disorders (e.g., schizophrenia, ADHD, autism): - Greicius, 2008 - Posner et al., 2014 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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9/33 Resting-state fMRI analysis: seed-based approach in Parkinson’s disease Seed-based approach - a priori knowledge/hypothesis Parkinson’s disease: Helmich et al., 2010 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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10/33 Seed-based approach - a priori knowledge/hypothesis Parkinson’s disease: Helmich et al., 2010 Resting-state fMRI analysis: seed-based approach in Parkinson’s disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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11/33 Very careful study: - negative control with DMN - corrected for motion (higher in patients) - checked for the effect of tremor: no tremor versus tremor spatial map, regressing out muscle activity (electromyography) Very careful study: - negative control with DMN Very careful study: - negative control with DMN - corrected for motion (higher in patients) - checked for the effect of tremor: no tremor versus tremor spatial map, regressing out muscle activity (electromyography) - checked effect of medication - checked for grey matter volume differences of seeds and whole-brain VBM Very careful study: - negative control with DMN - corrected for motion (higher in patients) - checked for the effect of tremor: no tremor versus tremor spatial map, regressing out muscle activity (electromyography) - checked effect of medication Seed-based approach - a priori knowledge/hypothesis Parkinson’s disease: Helmich et al., 2010 Functional compensation with anterior putamen “taking over” connections to IPC: increased connectivity between IPC and anterior putamen in Parkinson’s was larger for the least-affected side Resting-state fMRI analysis: seed-based approach in Parkinson’s disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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12/33 ICA-based approach – more exploratory (though can also be hypothesis-driven) Alzheimer’s disease: Zamboni et al., 2013 Dual regression for group comparisons Resting-state fMRI analysis: ICA-based approach in Alzheimer’s disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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13/33 ICA-based approach – more exploratory (though can also be hypothesis-driven) Alzheimer’s disease: Zamboni et al., 2013 Resting-state fMRI analysis: ICA-based approach in Alzheimer’s disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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14/33 ICA-based approach – more exploratory (though can also be hypothesis-driven) Alzheimer’s disease: Zamboni et al., 2013 Resting-state fMRI less confounds, task fMRI more interpretable: “Increased frontal activity during a memory task overlaps with increased frontal connectivity during rest in AD patients, suggesting that residual cognitive ability can be assessed using resting fMRI.” Very careful study: - same number of healthy and AD participants for ICA - negative control with auditory RSN - corrected for GM volume - checked for the effect of physiological fluctuations (respiratory + cardiac activity) Resting-state fMRI analysis: ICA-based approach in Alzheimer’s disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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15/33 Graph theory – exploratory (though mostly no basal ganglia or cerebellum) Schizophrenia: van den Heuvel et al., 2013 Resting-state fMRI analysis: Graph-based approach in schizophrenia ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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16/33 Careful study: - includes basal ganglia - used Freesurfer parcellation for ROIs (as opposed to AAL) - replication dataset effects not specific to Rich Club - but: “This study did not reveal a clear association between clinical metrics of patients and rich club organization” Careful study: - includes basal ganglia - used Freesurfer parcellation for ROIs (as opposed to AAL) Graph theory – exploratory (though mostly no basal ganglia or cerebellum) Schizophrenia: van den Heuvel et al., 2013 “Reduced level of rich club interconnectivity in patients with schizophrenia (…), potentially resulting in decreased global communication capacity and altered functional brain dynamics” Resting-state fMRI analysis: Graph-based approach in schizophrenia ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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17/33 Combining information – diffusion tensor and tractography Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Douaud, Filippini et al., 2011 Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in motor neuron disease Increase FC in ALS ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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18/33 Combining information – diffusion tensor and tractography Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Douaud, Filippini et al., 2011 Disease duration Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in motor neuron disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014 Careful registration (BBR + VBM)
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19/33 Reconciling lower structural connectivity (SC) with higher functional connectivity? Combining information – diffusion tensor and tractography Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Douaud, Filippini et al., 2011 Higher functional connectivity not necessarily better Innocenti, 2009 corpus callosum GABAergic interneurons Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in motor neuron disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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20/33 Combining information – diffusion tensor and tractography Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Douaud, Filippini et al., 2011 Low SC + high FC in ALS = loss of GABA interneurons - GABA+ FC Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in motor neuron disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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21/33 Combining information – grey matter volume/structural covariance Array of neurodegenerative disorders: Seeley et al., 2009 Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in neurodegenerative diseases ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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22/33 Combining information – grey matter volume/structural covariance Array of neurodegenerative disorders: Seeley et al., 2009 Resting-state fMRI analysis: Multi-modal approach in neurodegenerative diseases Dissociable networks for each disease ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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23/33 Variability of results in fcMRI Fox & Greicius, 2010 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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24/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: some guidelines Fox & Greicius, 2010 Parkinson’s: Seeds in the striatum DMN as negative control Alzheimer’s: RSN (ICA) involving frontal areas auditory RSN as negative control ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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25/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: some guidelines Fox & Greicius, 2010 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014 + careful registration
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26/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: some guidelines Fox & Greicius, 2010 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014 + careful registration
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27/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: movement Power et al., 2012 “Scrub” the data, add motion parameters, or use ICA+FIX ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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28/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: movement “Scrub” the data, add motion parameters, or use ICA+FIX Salimi-Khorshidi et al., 2014 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014 Griffanti et al., 2014
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29/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: some guidelines Fox & Greicius, 2010 Global signal regression, # of ICs etc. ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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30/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: some guidelines Fox & Greicius, 2010 ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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31/33 Variability of results in fcMRI: stability of networks Inter-subject variability is higher in higher-order regions (Mueller et al., 2013) ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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32/33 Interpretation of functional connectivity results Higher not necessarily better Always check for each contrast what happens in each cluster Some RSN are more stable than others Absolute values of correlations matter ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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33/33 Higher not necessarily better Some RSN are more stable than others Bear in mind that change in correlations can be observed even in the absence of a change in coupling (Friston, 2011) Changes in correlation between A and B could be caused by a change in correlation elsewhere Always check for each contrast what happens in each cluster It’s the absolute values of correlations that matter Changes in correlation could be caused by a change in SNR (e.g., heart rate variability differs between two populations) Changes in correlation could be caused by a change in the amplitude of the fluctuations Bear in mind that “resting” is to some extent also a task Interpretation of functional connectivity results ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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34/33 FMRIB, University of Oxford - Steve Smith - Eugene Duff - Christian Beckmann - Reza Salimi-Khorshidi - Martin Turner - Giovanna Zamboni - Nicola Filippini - Marina Charquero Ballester THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION Special thanks to: ISMRM Educational course – 10 th of May 2014
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