功能磁共振成像
疾病
医学
神经影像学
后扣带
磁共振成像
大脑结构与功能
顶叶
神经科学
内科学
心理学
放射科
作者
Alessandro Agostini,Francesca Benuzzi,Daniela Ballotta,Fernando Rizzello,Paolo Gionchetti,Nicola Filippini
出处
期刊:Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2023-03-10
卷期号:29 (8): 1297-1305
被引量:3
摘要
Crohn's disease (CD) is an inflammatory, chronic disorder that alternates between a quiescent phase and inflammatory flare-ups. Research has begun to elucidate the impact of CD in modulating brain structure and function. The previous neuroimaging studies mainly involved CD patients in remission (CD-R); therefore, little is known about how inflammation influences brain-related features in different stages of the disease. We carried out a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study to explore whether the different levels of disease activity may differentially affect brain structure and function.Fourteen CD-R patients, 19 patients with mild to moderate inflammatory activity (CD-A), and 18 healthy controls (HCs) underwent an MRI scan including structural and functional sequences.Between-group comparisons showed morphological and functional brain differences distinctively associated with the stage of disease activity. The CD-A patients had reduced gray matter within the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) relative to CD-R patients. Analysis on resting fMRI data showed the following patterns: (1) increased connectivity within the left fronto-parietal network (in the superior parietal lobe) in CD-R patients relative to CD-A patients; (2) decreased connectivity in the motor network (in parietal and motor areas) in the CD-A group relative to the HC group; (3) reduced connectivity in the motor network and (4) in the language network (in parietal areas and in the PCC) in CD-R patients relative to HC.The present findings represent a further step towards understanding brain morphological and functional changes in the active vs remission stages of CD patients.We found morphological and functional brain changes associated with different stages of disease activity in Crohn’s disease. These findings may represent the neural correlates of fatigue, irritable bowel syndrome–like symptoms, and cognitive-emotional impairments; these could be useful for evaluating disease progression.
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