Functional Brain Connectivity during Multiple Motor Imagery Tasks in Spinal Cord Injury

Joint Authors

Athanasiou, Alkinoos
Pandria, Niki
Terzopoulos, Nikos
Xygonakis, Ioannis
Foroglou, Nicolas
Polyzoidis, Konstantinos
Bamidis, Panagiotis D.

Source

Neural Plasticity

Issue

Vol. 2018, Issue 2018 (31 Dec. 2018), pp.1-20, 20 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2018-05-02

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

20

Main Subjects

Biology
Medicine

Abstract EN

Reciprocal communication of the central and peripheral nervous systems is compromised during spinal cord injury due to neurotrauma of ascending and descending pathways.

Changes in brain organization after spinal cord injury have been associated with differences in prognosis.

Changes in functional connectivity may also serve as injury biomarkers.

Most studies on functional connectivity have focused on chronic complete injury or resting-state condition.

In our study, ten right-handed patients with incomplete spinal cord injury and ten age- and gender-matched healthy controls performed multiple visual motor imagery tasks of upper extremities and walking under high-resolution electroencephalography recording.

Directed transfer function was used to study connectivity at the cortical source space between sensorimotor nodes.

Chronic disruption of reciprocal communication in incomplete injury could result in permanent significant decrease of connectivity in a subset of the sensorimotor network, regardless of positive or negative neurological outcome.

Cingulate motor areas consistently contributed the larger outflow (right) and received the higher inflow (left) among all nodes, across all motor imagery categories, in both groups.

Injured subjects had higher outflow from left cingulate than healthy subjects and higher inflow in right cingulate than healthy subjects.

Alpha networks were less dense, showing less integration and more segregation than beta networks.

Spinal cord injury patients showed signs of increased local processing as adaptive mechanism.

This trial is registered with NCT02443558.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Athanasiou, Alkinoos& Terzopoulos, Nikos& Pandria, Niki& Xygonakis, Ioannis& Foroglou, Nicolas& Polyzoidis, Konstantinos…[et al.]. 2018. Functional Brain Connectivity during Multiple Motor Imagery Tasks in Spinal Cord Injury. Neural Plasticity،Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210523

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Athanasiou, Alkinoos…[et al.]. Functional Brain Connectivity during Multiple Motor Imagery Tasks in Spinal Cord Injury. Neural Plasticity No. 2018 (2018), pp.1-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210523

American Medical Association (AMA)

Athanasiou, Alkinoos& Terzopoulos, Nikos& Pandria, Niki& Xygonakis, Ioannis& Foroglou, Nicolas& Polyzoidis, Konstantinos…[et al.]. Functional Brain Connectivity during Multiple Motor Imagery Tasks in Spinal Cord Injury. Neural Plasticity. 2018. Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210523

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1210523