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Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression. / Bezmaternykh, D. D.; Mel’nikov, M. E.; Petrovskii, E. D. et al.

In: Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, Vol. 165, No. 3, 07.2018, p. 325-330.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Bezmaternykh, DD, Mel’nikov, ME, Petrovskii, ED, Kozlova, LI, Shtark, MB, Savelov, AA, Shubina, OS & Natarova, KA 2018, 'Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression', Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, vol. 165, no. 3, pp. 325-330. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3

APA

Bezmaternykh, D. D., Mel’nikov, M. E., Petrovskii, E. D., Kozlova, L. I., Shtark, M. B., Savelov, A. A., Shubina, O. S., & Natarova, K. A. (2018). Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression. Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, 165(3), 325-330. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3

Vancouver

Bezmaternykh DD, Mel’nikov ME, Petrovskii ED, Kozlova LI, Shtark MB, Savelov AA et al. Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression. Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine. 2018 Jul;165(3):325-330. doi: 10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3

Author

Bezmaternykh, D. D. ; Mel’nikov, M. E. ; Petrovskii, E. D. et al. / Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression. In: Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine. 2018 ; Vol. 165, No. 3. pp. 325-330.

BibTeX

@article{5880635843f447d09bde9397a520aac4,
title = "Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression",
abstract = "Depression is associated with changes in the pattern of interaction of cerebral networks, which can reflect both existing symptoms and compensatory processes. The study is based on analysis of resting state fMRI data from 15 patients with mild depression and 19 conventionally healthy individuals. From fMRI signal recorded at rest for 4 min, the independent components were reconstructed. The intergroup differences and dynamics of functional connectivity from the first to the second recording were analyzed. Initially, depressive patients demonstrated weaker connectivity between cerebellar declive network (CN) and left central executive network (CEN) and also sensorimotor network (SMN); left CEN and primary visual network (PVN). During the second recording, the patients demonstrated more intensive reciprocal connection of the dorsal domain of default mode network (DMN) and auditory network (AN). In healthy subjects, positive correlations of the dorsal DMN and left CEN, right CEN and CN, and negative correlation of dorsal DMN and visuospatial network weakened from the first to second record. In the depression group, the interaction of AN with PVN, the right CEN with the anterior salience network and with ventral DMN weakened. At the same time, the connectivity between SMN and CN were strengthened. The results can be interpreted as spontaneous normalization of brain activity, but no direct evidence for their relation to the improvement of depression symptoms was found.",
keywords = "analysis of independent components, cerebral networks, depression, fMRI at rest, DISORDER, NETWORKS, DYSFUNCTION, 1ST-EPISODE, CIRCUIT",
author = "Bezmaternykh, {D. D.} and Mel{\textquoteright}nikov, {M. E.} and Petrovskii, {E. D.} and Kozlova, {L. I.} and Shtark, {M. B.} and Savelov, {A. A.} and Shubina, {O. S.} and Natarova, {K. A.}",
year = "2018",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3",
language = "English",
volume = "165",
pages = "325--330",
journal = "Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine",
issn = "0007-4888",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spontaneous Changes in Functional Connectivity of Independent Components of fMRI Signal in Healthy Volunteers at Rest and in Subjects with Mild Depression

AU - Bezmaternykh, D. D.

AU - Mel’nikov, M. E.

AU - Petrovskii, E. D.

AU - Kozlova, L. I.

AU - Shtark, M. B.

AU - Savelov, A. A.

AU - Shubina, O. S.

AU - Natarova, K. A.

PY - 2018/7

Y1 - 2018/7

N2 - Depression is associated with changes in the pattern of interaction of cerebral networks, which can reflect both existing symptoms and compensatory processes. The study is based on analysis of resting state fMRI data from 15 patients with mild depression and 19 conventionally healthy individuals. From fMRI signal recorded at rest for 4 min, the independent components were reconstructed. The intergroup differences and dynamics of functional connectivity from the first to the second recording were analyzed. Initially, depressive patients demonstrated weaker connectivity between cerebellar declive network (CN) and left central executive network (CEN) and also sensorimotor network (SMN); left CEN and primary visual network (PVN). During the second recording, the patients demonstrated more intensive reciprocal connection of the dorsal domain of default mode network (DMN) and auditory network (AN). In healthy subjects, positive correlations of the dorsal DMN and left CEN, right CEN and CN, and negative correlation of dorsal DMN and visuospatial network weakened from the first to second record. In the depression group, the interaction of AN with PVN, the right CEN with the anterior salience network and with ventral DMN weakened. At the same time, the connectivity between SMN and CN were strengthened. The results can be interpreted as spontaneous normalization of brain activity, but no direct evidence for their relation to the improvement of depression symptoms was found.

AB - Depression is associated with changes in the pattern of interaction of cerebral networks, which can reflect both existing symptoms and compensatory processes. The study is based on analysis of resting state fMRI data from 15 patients with mild depression and 19 conventionally healthy individuals. From fMRI signal recorded at rest for 4 min, the independent components were reconstructed. The intergroup differences and dynamics of functional connectivity from the first to the second recording were analyzed. Initially, depressive patients demonstrated weaker connectivity between cerebellar declive network (CN) and left central executive network (CEN) and also sensorimotor network (SMN); left CEN and primary visual network (PVN). During the second recording, the patients demonstrated more intensive reciprocal connection of the dorsal domain of default mode network (DMN) and auditory network (AN). In healthy subjects, positive correlations of the dorsal DMN and left CEN, right CEN and CN, and negative correlation of dorsal DMN and visuospatial network weakened from the first to second record. In the depression group, the interaction of AN with PVN, the right CEN with the anterior salience network and with ventral DMN weakened. At the same time, the connectivity between SMN and CN were strengthened. The results can be interpreted as spontaneous normalization of brain activity, but no direct evidence for their relation to the improvement of depression symptoms was found.

KW - analysis of independent components

KW - cerebral networks

KW - depression

KW - fMRI at rest

KW - DISORDER

KW - NETWORKS

KW - DYSFUNCTION

KW - 1ST-EPISODE

KW - CIRCUIT

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049863894&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3

DO - 10.1007/s10517-018-4161-3

M3 - Article

C2 - 30006882

AN - SCOPUS:85049863894

VL - 165

SP - 325

EP - 330

JO - Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine

JF - Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine

SN - 0007-4888

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 14727007