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Connectome-based prediction of functional impairment in experimental stroke models. | LitMetric

Connectome-based prediction of functional impairment in experimental stroke models.

PLoS One

Department of Neurological Surgery, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Experimental rat models of stroke and hemorrhage are critical for studying cerebrovascular disease, revealing how functional impairment relates to changes in brain connectivity.
  • The study utilized two types of stroke models and one hemorrhage model to assess motor skills and memory, while analyzing neuronal activation in the hippocampus.
  • Findings showed that the extent and location of brain injuries correlate with functional impairments, and remote brain regions exhibited significant connectivity changes affecting learning and memory abilities.

Article Abstract

Experimental rat models of stroke and hemorrhage are important tools to investigate cerebrovascular disease pathophysiology mechanisms, yet how significant patterns of functional impairment induced in various models of stroke are related to changes in connectivity at the level of neuronal populations and mesoscopic parcellations of rat brains remain unresolved. To address this gap in knowledge, we employed two middle cerebral artery occlusion models and one intracerebral hemorrhage model with variant extent and location of neuronal dysfunction. Motor and spatial memory function was assessed and the level of hippocampal activation via Fos immunohistochemistry. Contribution of connectivity change to functional impairment was analyzed for connection similarities, graph distances and spatial distances as well as the importance of regions in terms of network architecture based on the neuroVIISAS rat connectome. We found that functional impairment correlated with not only the extent but also the locations of the injury among the models. In addition, via coactivation analysis in dynamic rat brain models, we found that lesioned regions led to stronger coactivations with motor function and spatial learning regions than with other unaffected regions of the connectome. Dynamic modeling with the weighted bilateral connectome detected changes in signal propagation in the remote hippocampus in all 3 stroke types, predicting the extent of hippocampal hypoactivation and impairment in spatial learning and memory function. Our study provides a comprehensive analytical framework in predictive identification of remote regions not directly altered by stroke events and their functional implication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11658581PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0310743PLOS

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