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Roland Wiest

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30 papers
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30

YNICL Journal 2026 Journal Article

Grey matter volume associations with personality functioning in a clinical cohort of female youths

  • Madelyn Thomson
  • Marialuisa Cavelti
  • Ines Mürner-Lavanchy
  • Silvano Sele
  • Niklas Bürgi
  • Nora Seiffert
  • Franz Moggi
  • Roland Wiest

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a severe mental illness, although its neurobiological underpinnings remain largely unknown. Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging (sMRI) in adolescents can offer insights into potential biomarkers to help advance early detection and targeted intervention. However, previous findings have been mixed, possibly due to clinical heterogeneity that may be better captured using a dimensional approach to personality functioning (PF). The current study explored grey matter volume (GMV) in youth with varying degrees of BPD pathology, and associations with dimensional PF. N = 93 females (14-21 years) comprising three groups (full-threshold BPD, sub-threshold BPD, and healthy controls) underwent sMRI and were assessed with the Semi-Structured Interview for Personality Functioning DSM-5 (STiP-5.1). Groups were combined to reflect dimensional personality pathology. Multiple linear regression analyses were conducted to determine associations between the STiP-5.1 total score, and each of its four elements with: (i) total GMV, (ii) GMV in individual brain regions defined by the Desikan-Killiany-Tourville atlas, (iii) selected regions of interest (ROIs). All analyses were statistically non-significant: STiP-5.1 total and total GMV (p = 0.61); STiP-5.1 total and individual brain regions (all corrected p values ≥0.82); STiP-5.1 total and ROIs (all corrected p values ≥0.91). Results were non-significant for each element, and a validity check using BPD criteria confirmed STiP-5.1 findings. We found no evidence of an association of dimensionally assessed PF with GMV in young females. The pursuit of clinical research efforts on other potential biomarkers using dimensional conceptualisations of PF may represent worthy endeavours.

YNIMG Journal 2024 Journal Article

Analyzing fractal dimension in electroconvulsive therapy: Unraveling complexity in structural and functional neuroimaging

  • Niklaus Denier
  • Matthias Grieder
  • Kay Jann
  • Sigrid Breit
  • Nicolas Mertse
  • Sebastian Walther
  • Leila M. Soravia
  • Agnes Meyer

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies show that electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) induces hippocampal neuroplasticity, but findings are inconsistent regarding its clinical relevance. This study aims to investigate ECT-induced plasticity of anterior and posterior hippocampi using mathematical complexity measures in neuroimaging, namely Higuchi's fractal dimension (HFD) for fMRI time series and the fractal dimension of cortical morphology (FD-CM). Furthermore, we explore the potential of these complexity measures to predict ECT treatment response. METHODS: Twenty patients with a current depressive episode (16 with major depressive disorder and 4 with bipolar disorder) underwent MRI-scans before and after an ECT-series. Twenty healthy controls matched for age and sex were also scanned twice for comparison purposes. Resting-state fMRI data were processed, and HFD was computed for anterior and posterior hippocampi. Group-by-time effects for HFD in anterior and posterior hippocampi were calculated and correlations between HFD changes and improvement in depression severity were examined. For FD-CM analyses, we preprocessed structural MRI with CAT12's surface-based methods. We explored group-by-time effects for FD-CM and the predictive value of baseline HFD and FD-CM for treatment outcome. RESULTS: Patients exhibited a significant increase in bilateral hippocampal HFD from baseline to follow-up scans. Right anterior hippocampal HFD increase was associated with reductions in depression severity. We found no group differences and group-by-time effects in FD-CM. After applying a whole-brain regression analysis, we found that baseline FD-CM in the left temporal pole predicted reduction of overall depression severity after ECT. Baseline hippocampal HFD did not predict treatment outcome. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that HFD and FD-CM are promising imaging markers to investigate ECT-induced neuroplasticity associated with treatment response.

YNICL Journal 2024 Journal Article

Cortical thickness and grey-matter volume anomaly detection in individual MRI scans: Comparison of two methods

  • David Romascano
  • Michael Rebsamen
  • Piotr Radojewski
  • Timo Blattner
  • Richard McKinley
  • Roland Wiest
  • Christian Rummel

Over the past decades, morphometric analysis of brain MRI has contributed substantially to the understanding of healthy brain structure, development and aging as well as to improved characterisation of disease related pathologies. Certified commercial tools based on normative modeling of these metrics are meanwhile available for diagnostic purposes, but they are cost intensive and their clinical evaluation is still in its infancy. Here we have compared the performance of "ScanOMetrics", an open-source research-level tool for detection of statistical anomalies in individual MRI scans, depending on whether it is operated on the output of FreeSurfer or of the deep learning based brain morphometry tool DL + DiReCT. When applied to the public OASIS3 dataset, containing patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and healthy controls (HC), cortical thickness anomalies in patient scans were mainly detected in regions that are known as predilection areas of cortical atrophy in AD, regardless of the software used for extraction of the metrics. By contrast, anomaly detections in HCs were up to twenty-fold reduced and spatially unspecific using both DL + DiReCT and FreeSurfer. Progression of the atrophy pattern with clinical dementia rating (CDR) was clearly observable with both methods. DL + DiReCT provided results in less than 25 min, more than 15 times faster than FreeSurfer. This difference in computation time might be relevant when considering application of this or similar methodology as diagnostic decision support for neuroradiologists.

YNIMG Journal 2024 Journal Article

Simultaneous multi-region detection of GABA+ and Glx using 3D spatially resolved SLOW-editing and EPSI-readout at 7T

  • Guodong Weng
  • Johannes Slotboom
  • Philippe Schucht
  • Ekin Ermiş
  • Roland Wiest
  • Stefan Klöppel
  • Jessica Peter
  • Irena Zubak

GABA+ and Glx (glutamate and glutamine) are widely studied metabolites, yet the commonly used magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) techniques have significant limitations, including sensitivity to B 0 and B 1 +-inhomogeneities, limited bandwidth of MEGA-pulses, high SAR which is accentuated at 7T. To address these limitations, we propose SLOW-EPSI method, employing a large 3D MRSI coverage and achieving a high resolution down to 0. 26 ml. Simulation results demonstrate the robustness of SLOW-editing for both GABA+ and Glx against B 0 and B 1 +-inhomogeneities within the range of [-0. 3, +0. 3] ppm and [40 %, 250 %], respectively. Two protocols, both utilizing a 70 mm thick FOV slab, were employed to target distinct brain regions in vivo, differentiated by their orientation: transverse and tilted. Protocol 1 (n = 11) encompassed 5 locations (cortical gray matter, white matter, frontal lobe, parietal lobe, and cingulate gyrus). Protocol 2 (n = 5) involved 9 locations (cortical gray matter, white matter, frontal lobe, occipital lobe, cingulate gyrus, caudate nucleus, hippocampus, putamen, and inferior thalamus). Quantitative analysis of GABA+ and Glx was conducted in a stepwise manner. First, B 1 + /B 1 –-inhomogeneities were corrected using water reference data. Next, GABA+ and Glx values were calculated employing spectral fitting. Finally, the GABA+ level for each selected region was compared to the global Glx within the same subject, generating the GABA+/Glx_global ratio. Our findings from two protocols indicate that the GABA+/Glx_global level in cortical gray matter was approximately 16 % higher than in white matter. Elevated GABA+/Glx_global levels acquired with protocol 2 were observed in specific regions such as the caudate nucleus (0. 118±0. 067), putamen (0. 108±0. 023), thalamus (0. 092±0. 036), and occipital cortex (0. 091±0. 010), when compared to the cortical gray matter (0. 079±0. 012). Overall, our results highlight the effectiveness of SLOW-EPSI as a robust and efficient technique for accurate measurements of GABA+ and Glx at 7T. In contrast to previous SVS and 2D-MRSI based editing sequences with which only one or a limited number of brain regions can be measured simultaneously, the method presented here measures GABA+ and Glx from any brain area and any arbitrarily shaped volume that can be flexibly selected after the examination. Quantification of GABA+ and Glx across multiple brain regions through spectral fitting is achievable with a 9-minute acquisition. Additionally, acquisition times of 18–27 min (GABA+) and 9–18 min (Glx) are required to generate 3D maps, which are constructed using Gaussian fitting and peak integration.

YNICL Journal 2023 Journal Article

Associations of resting-state perfusion and auditory verbal hallucinations with and without emotional content in schizophrenia

  • Frauke Conring
  • Nicole Gangl
  • Melodie Derome
  • Roland Wiest
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Sebastian Walther
  • Katharina Stegmayer

Auditory Verbal Hallucinations (AVH) are highly prevalent in patients with schizophrenia. AVH with high emotional content lead to particularly poor functional outcome. Increasing evidence shows that AVH are associated with alterations in structure and function in language and memory related brain regions. However, neural correlates of AVH with emotional content remain unclear. In our study (n = 91), we related resting-state cerebral perfusion to AVH and emotional content, comparing four groups: patients with AVH with emotional content (n = 13), without emotional content (n = 14), without hallucinations (n = 20) and healthy controls (n = 44). Patients with AVH and emotional content presented with increased perfusion within the amygdala and the ventromedial and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC/ dmPFC) compared to patients with AVH without emotional content. In addition, patients with any AVH showed hyperperfusion within the anterior cingulate gyrus, the vmPFC/dmPFC, the right hippocampus, and the left pre- and postcentral gyrus compared to patients without AVH. Our results indicate metabolic alterations in brain areas critical for the processing of emotions as key for the pathophysiology of AVH with emotional content. Particularly, hyperperfusion of the amygdala may reflect and even trigger emotional content of AVH, while hyperperfusion of the vmPFC/dmPFC cluster may indicate insufficient top-down amygdala regulation in patients with schizophrenia.

YNICL Journal 2023 Journal Article

Electroconvulsive therapy induces remodeling of hippocampal co-activation with the default mode network in patients with depression

  • Niklaus Denier
  • Sebastian Walther
  • Sigrid Breit
  • Nicolas Mertse
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Agnes Meyer
  • Leila M. Soravia
  • Meret Wallimann

INTRODUCTION: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a highly efficient treatment for depression. Previous studies repeatedly reported an ECT-induced volume increase in the hippocampi. We assume that this also affects extended hippocampal networks. This study aims to investigate the structural and functional interplay between hippocampi, hippocampal pathways and core regions of the default mode network (DMN). Twenty patients with a current depressive episode receiving ECT-treatment and twenty age and sex matched healthy controls (HC) were included in the study. ECT-patients underwent multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-scans (diffusion weighted imaging, resting state functional MRI) before and after an ECT-index series. HC were also scanned twice in a similar between-scan time-interval. Parahippocampal cingulum (PHC) and uncinate fasciculus (UF) were reconstructed for each participant using manual tractography. Fractional anisotropy (FA) was averaged across tracts. Furthermore, we investigated seed-based functional connectivity (FC) from bilateral hippocampi and from the PCC, a core region of the DMN. At baseline, FA in PHC and UF did not differ between groups. There was no baseline group difference of hippocampal-FC. PCC-FC was decreased in ECT-patients. ECT induced a decrease in FA in the left PHC in the ECT group. No longitudinal changes of FA were found in the UF. Furthermore, there was a decrease in hippocampal-PCC-FC, an increase in hippocampal-supplementary motor area-FC, and an increase in PCC-FC in the ECT-group, reversing group differences at baseline. Our findings suggest that ECT induces structural and functional remodeling of a hippocampal-DMN. Those changes may contribute to ECT-induced clinical response in patients with depression.

YNICL Journal 2022 Journal Article

Distinguishing transient from persistent tactile agnosia after partial anterior circulation infarcts – Behavioral and neuroimaging evidence for white matter disconnection

  • John H. Missimer
  • Eugenio Abela
  • Manuela Pastore-Wapp
  • Roland Wiest
  • Bruno J. Weder

From a cohort of 36 patients presenting apperceptive tactile agnosia after first cortical ischemic stroke, 14 showed temporary impairment at admission. A previous multi-voxel analysis of the cortical lesions, using as explanatory variable the course of tactile object recognition performance over the recovery period of 9 months, partitioned the cohort into three subgroups. Of the 14 patients constituting two of the subgroups, 7 recovered from their impairment whereas 7 did not. These two subgroups could not be distinguished at admission. The primary aim of the present study is to present two assessments that can do so. The first assessment comprises a pattern of behavioral measures, determined via principal component analysis, encoded in three tests: picking small objects, macrogeometrical discrimination and tactile object recognition. The receiver operating characteristic curve derived from permutation of the behavioral test scores yielded an 80% probability of correct identification of the patient subgroup and an 8% probability for false identification. As done with the permuted scores, the pattern could predict the persistence of affliction of new stroke patients with tactile agnosia. The second predictive assessment extends our previous evaluation of cortical MRI lesion maps to include subcortical regions. Confirming our previous study, the lesions of the persistently impaired subgroup disrupted significantly the anterior arcuatus fasciculus and associated superior longitudinal fasciculus III in the ipsilesional hemisphere, impeding reciprocal information transfer between supramarginal gyrus and both the ventral premotor cortex and Brodmann area 44. Due to the importance of interhemispheric information transfer in tactile agnosia, we performed a supplementary analysis of tactile object recognition scores. It showed that haptic information transfer from the non-affected to the affected hands in the persistent cases partly restored function during the nine months, possibly following restoration of functional interhemispheric haptic information transfer at the border of posterior corpus callosum and splenium. In conclusion, the combined findings of the cortical lesion at subarea PFt of the inferior parietal lobule and the associated subcortical tract lesions permit almost perfect prediction of persistent impairment of tactile object recognition. The study substantiates the need for combined analysis of both cortical lesions and white matter tract disconnections.

YNICL Journal 2022 Journal Article

Link between structural connectivity of the medial forebrain bundle, functional connectivity of the ventral tegmental area, and anhedonia in unipolar depression

  • Tobias Bracht
  • Nicolas Mertse
  • Sebastian Walther
  • Karin Lüdi
  • Sigrid Breit
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Roland Wiest
  • Niklaus Denier

The ventral tegmental area (VTA), nucleus accumbens (NAcc), and prefrontal cortex (PFC) are essential for experiencing pleasure and initiating motivated behaviour. The VTA, NAcc, and PFC are connected through the medial forebrain bundle (MFB). In humans, two branches have been described: an infero-medial branch (imMFB) and a supero-lateral branch (slMFB). This study aimed to explore the associations between structural connectivity of the MFB, functional connectivity (FC) of the VTA, anhedonia, and depression severity in patients with depression. Fifty-six patients with unipolar depression and 22 healthy controls matched for age, sex, and handedness were recruited at the University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy in Bern, Switzerland. Diffusion-weighted imaging and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scans were acquired. Using manual tractography, the imMFB and slMFB were reconstructed bilaterally for each participant. Seed-based resting-state FC was computed from the VTA to the PFC. Hedonic tone was assessed using the Fawcett-Clark Pleasure Scale. We identified reduced tract volume and reduced number of tracts in the left slMFB. There was an increase in FC between the VTA and right medial PFC in patients with depression. Depression severity was associated with reduced tract volume and fewer tracts in the left slMFB. Reduced hedonic tone was associated with reduced tract volume. Conversely, reduced hedonic tone was associated with increased FC between the VTA and the PFC. In conclusion, our results suggest reduced structural connectivity of the slMFB in patients with depression. Increases in FC between the VTA and PFC may be associated with anhedonia or compensatory hyperactivity.

YNIMG Journal 2022 Journal Article

Stationary EEG pattern relates to large-scale resting state networks – An EEG-fMRI study connecting brain networks across time-scales

  • J. Daniel Arzate-Mena
  • Eugenio Abela
  • Paola V. Olguín-Rodríguez
  • Wady Ríos-Herrera
  • Sarael Alcauter
  • Kaspar Schindler
  • Roland Wiest
  • Markus F. Müller

Relating brain dynamics acting on time scales that differ by at least an order of magnitude is a fundamental issue in brain research. The same is true for the observation of stable dynamical structures in otherwise highly non-stationary signals. The present study addresses both problems by the analysis of simultaneous resting state EEG-fMRI recordings of 53 patients with epilepsy. Confirming previous findings, we observe a generic and temporally stable average correlation pattern in EEG recordings. We design a predictor for the General Linear Model describing fluctuations around the stationary EEG correlation pattern and detect resting state networks in fMRI data. The acquired statistical maps are contrasted to several surrogate tests and compared with maps derived by spatial Independent Component Analysis of the fMRI data. By means of the proposed EEG-predictor we observe core nodes of known fMRI resting state networks with high specificity in the default mode, the executive control and the salience network. Our results suggest that both, the stationary EEG pattern as well as resting state fMRI networks are different expressions of the same brain activity. This activity is interpreted as the dynamics on (or close to) a stable attractor in phase space that is necessary to maintain the brain in an efficient operational mode. We discuss that this interpretation is congruent with the theoretical framework of complex systems as well as with the brain's energy balance.

YNICL Journal 2021 Journal Article

Artificial intelligence for classification of temporal lobe epilepsy with ROI-level MRI data: A worldwide ENIGMA-Epilepsy study

  • Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht
  • Brent C. Munsell
  • Saud Alhusaini
  • Marina K.M. Alvim
  • Núria Bargalló
  • Benjamin Bender
  • Andrea Bernasconi
  • Neda Bernasconi

Artificial intelligence has recently gained popularity across different medical fields to aid in the detection of diseases based on pathology samples or medical imaging findings. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a key assessment tool for patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). The role of machine learning and artificial intelligence to increase detection of brain abnormalities in TLE remains inconclusive. We used support vector machine (SV) and deep learning (DL) models based on region of interest (ROI-based) structural (n = 336) and diffusion (n = 863) brain MRI data from patients with TLE with ("lesional") and without ("non-lesional") radiographic features suggestive of underlying hippocampal sclerosis from the multinational (multi-center) ENIGMA-Epilepsy consortium. Our data showed that models to identify TLE performed better or similar (68-75%) compared to models to lateralize the side of TLE (56-73%, except structural-based) based on diffusion data with the opposite pattern seen for structural data (67-75% to diagnose vs. 83% to lateralize). In other aspects, structural and diffusion-based models showed similar classification accuracies. Our classification models for patients with hippocampal sclerosis were more accurate (68-76%) than models that stratified non-lesional patients (53-62%). Overall, SV and DL models performed similarly with several instances in which SV mildly outperformed DL. We discuss the relative performance of these models with ROI-level data and the implications for future applications of machine learning and artificial intelligence in epilepsy care.

YNICL Journal 2020 Journal Article

Automatic detection of lesion load change in Multiple Sclerosis using convolutional neural networks with segmentation confidence

  • Richard McKinley
  • Rik Wepfer
  • Lorenz Grunder
  • Fabian Aschwanden
  • Tim Fischer
  • Christoph Friedli
  • Raphaela Muri
  • Christian Rummel

The detection of new or enlarged white-matter lesions is a vital task in the monitoring of patients undergoing disease-modifying treatment for multiple sclerosis. However, the definition of 'new or enlarged' is not fixed, and it is known that lesion-counting is highly subjective, with high degree of inter- and intra-rater variability. Automated methods for lesion quantification, if accurate enough, hold the potential to make the detection of new and enlarged lesions consistent and repeatable. However, the majority of lesion segmentation algorithms are not evaluated for their ability to separate radiologically progressive from radiologically stable patients, despite this being a pressing clinical use-case. In this paper, we explore the ability of a deep learning segmentation classifier to separate stable from progressive patients by lesion volume and lesion count, and find that neither measure provides a good separation. Instead, we propose a method for identifying lesion changes of high certainty, and establish on an internal dataset of longitudinal multiple sclerosis cases that this method is able to separate progressive from stable time-points with a very high level of discrimination (AUC = 0.999), while changes in lesion volume are much less able to perform this separation (AUC = 0.71). Validation of the method on two external datasets confirms that the method is able to generalize beyond the setting in which it was trained, achieving an accuracies of 75 % and 85 % in separating stable and progressive time-points.

YNIMG Journal 2020 Journal Article

Functional topography of the thalamo-cortical system during development and its relation to cognition

  • Leonie Steiner
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Nedelina Slavova
  • Roland Wiest
  • Sebastian Grunt
  • Maja Steinlin
  • Regula Everts

The thalamus has complex connections with the cortex and is involved in various cognitive processes. However, little is known about the age-related changes of thalamo-cortical connections and their relation to cognitive abilities. The present study analyzed resting-state functional connectivity between the thalamus and nine cortical functional networks (default mode network (DMN), posterior DMN, left/right executive, dorsal attention, salience, motor, visual and auditory network) in a healthy human sample (N = 95, aged 5–25 years). Cognitive abilities, including processing speed, selective attention, and cognitive flexibility were assessed using neuropsychological tests. All nine cortical resting-state networks showed functional connections to the thalamus at rest, with no effect for sex (p > 0. 05). For the motor, visual, auditory, DMN, posterior DMN, salience and dorsal attention network, we found mainly bilateral thalamic projections in the mediodorsal nucleus, pulvinar and in nuclei of the lateral group. For the right and left lateralized executive network, corresponding lateralized thalamic projections were found. Thalamo-cortical connectivity strength showed significant age-related changes from distinct sub-nuclei of the thalamus to different cortical networks including the visual, DMN, salience and dorsal attention network. Further, connectivity strength of thalamo-cortical networks was associated with cognitive abilities, including processing speed, selective attention and cognitive flexibility. Better cognitive abilities were associated with increased thalamo-cortical connectivity in the pulvinar, mediodorsal nucleus, intralaminar nucleus, and nuclei from the lateral group. Alterations in the integrity of the thalamo-cortical system seem to be crucial for the development of cognitive abilities during brain maturation.

YNICL Journal 2020 Journal Article

Striatal reactivity to reward under threat-of-shock and working memory load in adults at increased familial risk for major depression: A preliminary study

  • Claudie Gaillard
  • Matthias Guillod
  • Monique Ernst
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Dominik Schoebi
  • Romina Evelyn Recabarren
  • Xinyi Ouyang
  • Christoph Mueller-Pfeiffer

INTRODUCTION: Anhedonia, a core symptom of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), manifests as a lack or loss of motivation as reflected by decreased reward responsiveness, at both behavioral and neural (i.e., striatum) levels. Exposure to stressful life events is another important risk factor for MDD. However, the mechanisms linking reward-deficit and stress to MDD remain poorly understood. Here, we explore whether the effects of stress exposure on reward processing might differentiate between Healthy Vulnerable adults (HVul, i.e., positive familial MDD) from Healthy Controls (HCon). Furthermore, the well-described reduction in cognitive resources in MDD might facilitate the stress-induced decrease in reward responsiveness in HVul individuals. Accordingly, this study includes a manipulation of cognitive resources to address the latter possibility. METHODS: 16 HVul (12 females) and 16 gender- and age-matched HCon completed an fMRI study, during which they performed a working memory reward task. Three factors were manipulated: reward (reward, no-reward), cognitive resources (working memory at low and high load), and stress level (no-shock, unpredictable threat-of-shock). Only the reward anticipation phase was analyzed. Imaging analyses focused on striatal function. RESULTS: Compared to HCon, HVul showed lower activation in the caudate nucleus across all conditions. The HVul group also exhibited lower stress-related activation in the nucleus accumbens, but only in the low working memory (WM) load condition. Moreover, while stress potentiated putamen reactivity to reward cues in HVul when the task was more demanding (high WM load), stress blunted putamen reactivity in both groups when no reward was at stake. CONCLUSION: Findings suggest that HVul might be at increased risk of developing anhedonic symptoms due to weaker encoding of reward value, higher difficulty to engage in goal-oriented behaviors and increased sensitivity to negative feedback, particularly in stressful contexts. These findings open new avenues for a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying how the complex interaction between the systems of stress and reward responsiveness contribute to the vulnerability to MDD, and how cognitive resources might modulate this interaction.

YNICL Journal 2020 Journal Article

Subclinical paranoid beliefs and enhanced neural response during processing of unattractive faces

  • Stephan Furger
  • Antje Stahnke
  • Francilia Zengaffinen
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Yosuke Morishima
  • Martina Papmeyer
  • Roland Wiest
  • Thomas Dierks

The perception of faces and consequent social inferences are fundamental for interpersonal communication. While facial expression is important for interindividual communication, constitutional and acquired features are crucial for basic emotions of attraction or repulsion. An emotional bias in face processing has been shown in schizophrenia, but the neurobiological mechanisms are unclear. Studies on the interaction between face processing and the emotional state of healthy individuals may help to elucidate the pathogenesis of the paranoid syndrome in psychosis. This study addressed facial attractiveness and paranoid ideas in a non-clinical population. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated neural activation patterns of 99 healthy subjects during the passive perception of a dynamic presentation of faces with different attractiveness. We found that the perceived attractiveness of faces was linked to the activity of face processing and limbic regions including the fusiform gyrus, amygdala, and prefrontal areas. Paranoid beliefs interacted with perceived attractiveness in these regions resulting in a higher response range and increased activation after the presentation of unattractive faces. However, no behavioral interactions between reported subjective attractiveness and paranoid beliefs were found. The results showed that increased activation of limbic brain regions is linked to paranoid beliefs. Since similar correlations were found in clinical populations with paranoid syndromes, we suggest a dimension of emotional dysregulation ranging from subclinical paranoid beliefs to paranoid schizophrenia.

YNICL Journal 2019 Journal Article

Increased structural connectivity of the medial forebrain bundle in schizophrenia spectrum disorders is associated with delusions of paranoid threat and grandiosity

  • Tobias Bracht
  • Petra V. Viher
  • Katharina Stegmayer
  • Werner Strik
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Roland Wiest
  • Sebastian Walther

In many cases delusions in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) are driven by strong emotions such as feelings of paranoia or grandiosity. We refer to these extreme emotional experiences as psychotic affectivity. We hypothesized that increased structural connectivity of the supero-lateral medial forebrain bundle (slMFB), a major tract of the reward system, is associated with delusional psychotic affectivity. Forty-six patients with SSD and 44 healthy controls (HC) underwent diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI)-scans. The slMFB and a comparison tract (corticospinal tract) were reconstructed using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)-based tractography. Fractional anisotropy (FA) was sampled across the tracts. We used a mixed-model analyses of variance controlling for age and gender to compare FA of bilateral slMFB between SSD-patients and HC. Correlations of FA of bilateral slMFB and the PANSS-positive item delusions were calculated. In addition, FA was compared between three clinically homogeneous SSD-subgroups in terms of psychotic affectivity (severe, mild and no PA, sPA, mPA, nPA) and HC. FA of the slMFB did not differ between all SSD-patients and HC. In SSD-patients there was a positive correlation between delusions and FA in bilateral slMFB. Likewise, SSD-subgroups of psychotic affectivity and HC differed significantly in FA of the slMFB. Results were driven by higher FA in the right slMFB in sPA as compared to nPA and to HC. There was no significant effect for the comparison tract. In conclusion, increased structural connectivity of the slMFB may underlie delusional experiences of paranoia and grandiosity in SSD.

YNICL Journal 2018 Journal Article

Accuracy of different three-dimensional subcortical human brain atlases for DBS –lead localisation

  • Andreas Nowacki
  • T.A-K. Nguyen
  • Gerd Tinkhauser
  • Katrin Petermann
  • Ines Debove
  • Roland Wiest
  • Claudio Pollo

BACKGROUND: Accurate interindividual comparability of deep brain stimulation (DBS) lead locations in relation to the surrounding anatomical structures is of eminent importance to define and understand effective stimulation areas. The objective of the current work is to compare the accuracy of the DBS lead localisation relative to the STN in native space with four recently developed three-dimensional subcortical brain atlases in the MNI template space. Accuracy is reviewed by anatomical and volumetric analysis as well as intraoperative electrophysiological data. METHODS: Postoperative lead localisations of 10 patients (19 hemispheres) were analysed in each individual patient based on Brainlab software (native space) and after normalization into the MNI space and application of 4 different human brain atlases using Lead-DBS toolbox within Matlab (template space). Each patient's STN was manually segmented and the relation between the reconstructed lead and the STN was compared to the 4 atlas-based STN models by applying the Dice coefficient. The length of intraoperative electrophysiological STN activity along different microelectrode recording tracks was measured and compared to reconstructions in native and template space. Descriptive non-parametric statistical tests were used to calculate differences between the 4 different atlases. RESULTS: The mean STN volume of the study cohort was 153.3 ± 40.3 mm3 (n = 19). This is similar to the STN volume of the DISTAL atlas (166 mm3; p = .22), but significantly larger compared to the other atlases tested in this study. The anatomical overlap of the lead-STN-reconstruction was highest for the DISTAL atlas (0.56 ± 0.18) and lowest for the PD25 atlas (0.34 ± 0.17). A total number of 47 MER trajectories through the STN were analysed. There was a statistically significant discrepancy of the electrophysiogical STN activity compared to the reconstructed STN of all four atlases (p < .0001). CONCLUSION: Lead reconstruction after normalization into the MNI template space and application of four different atlases led to different results in terms of the DBS lead position relative to the STN. Based on electrophysiological and imaging data, the DISTAL atlas led to the most accurate display of the reconstructed DBS lead relative to the DISTAL-based STN.

YNICL Journal 2018 Journal Article

Automated diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy in the absence of interictal spikes

  • Thibault Verhoeven
  • Ana Coito
  • Gijs Plomp
  • Aljoscha Thomschewski
  • Francesca Pittau
  • Eugen Trinka
  • Roland Wiest
  • Karl Schaller

Objective: To diagnose and lateralise temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) by building a classification system that uses directed functional connectivity patterns estimated during EEG periods without visible pathological activity. Methods: Resting-state high-density EEG recording data from 20 left TLE patients, 20 right TLE patients and 35 healthy controls was used. Epochs without interictal spikes were selected. The cortical source activity was obtained for 82 regions of interest and whole-brain directed functional connectivity was estimated in the theta, alpha and beta frequency bands. These connectivity values were then used to build a classification system based on two two-class Random Forests classifiers: TLE vs healthy controls and left vs right TLE. Feature selection and classifier training were done in a leave-one-out procedure to compute the mean classification accuracy. Results: The diagnosis and lateralization classifiers achieved a high accuracy (90.7% and 90.0% respectively), sensitivity (95.0% and 90.0% respectively) and specificity (85.7% and 90.0% respectively). The most important features for diagnosis were the outflows from left and right medial temporal lobe, and for lateralization the right anterior cingulate cortex. The interaction between features was important to achieve correct classification. Significance: This is the first study to automatically diagnose and lateralise TLE based on EEG. The high accuracy achieved demonstrates the potential of directed functional connectivity estimated from EEG periods without visible pathological activity for helping in the diagnosis and lateralization of TLE.

YNICL Journal 2018 Journal Article

Physical activity is associated with left corticospinal tract microstructure in bipolar depression

  • Tobias Bracht
  • Sarah Steinau
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Christoph Schneider
  • Roland Wiest
  • Sebastian Walther

Psychomotor retardation and reduced daily activities are core features of the depressive syndrome including bipolar disorder (BD). It was the aim of this study to investigate white matter microstructure of the motor system in BD during depression and its association with motor activity. We hypothesized reduced physical activity, microstructural alterations of motor tracts and different associations between activity levels and motor tract microstructure in BD. Nineteen bipolar patients with a current depressive episode (BD) and 19 healthy controls (HC) underwent diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI)-scans. Quantitative motor activity was assessed with 24 h actigraphy recordings. Bilateral corticospinal tracts (CST), interhemispheric connections between the primary motor cortices (M1) and between the pre-supplementary motor areas (pre-SMA) were reconstructed individually based on anatomical landmarks using Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) based tractography. Mean fractional anisotropy (FA) was sampled along the tracts. To enhance specificity of putative findings a segment of the optic radiation was reconstructed as comparison tract. Analyses were complemented with Tract Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) analyses. BD had lower activity levels (AL). There was a sole increase of fractional anisotropy (FA) in BD in the left CST. Further, there was a significant group x AL interaction for FA of the left CST pointing to a selective positive association between FA and AL in BD. The comparison tract and TBSS analyses did not detect significant group differences. Our results point to white matter microstructure alterations of the left CST in BD. The positive association between motor activity and white matter microstructure suggests a compensatory role of the left CST for psychomotor retardation in BD.

YNICL Journal 2018 Journal Article

Resting-state connectivity and executive functions after pediatric arterial ischemic stroke

  • Salome Kornfeld
  • Rui Yuan
  • Bharat B. Biswal
  • Sebastian Grunt
  • Sandeep Kamal
  • Juan Antonio Delgado Rodríguez
  • Mária Regényi
  • Roland Wiest

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare the relationship between core executive functions and frontoparietal network connections at rest between children who had suffered an arterial ischemic stroke and typically developing peers. METHODS: Children diagnosed with arterial ischemic stroke more than two years previously and typically developing controls were included. Executive function (EF) measures comprised inhibition (Go-NoGo task), fluency (category fluency task), processing speed (processing speed tasks), divided attention, working memory (letter-number sequencing), conceptual reasoning (matrices) and EF in everyday life (questionnaire). High-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) structural images and resting-state functional MR imaging were acquired. Independent component analysis was used to identify the frontoparietal network. Functional connections were obtained through correlation matrices; associations between cognitive measures and functional connections through Pearson's correlations. RESULTS: Twenty participants after stroke (7 females; mean age 16.0 years) and 22 controls (13 females; mean age 14.8 years) were examined. Patients and controls performed within the normal range in all executive tasks. Patients who had had a stroke performed significantly less well in tests of fluency, processing speed and conceptual reasoning than controls. Resting-state functional connectivity between the left and right inferior parietal lobe was significantly reduced in patients after pediatric stroke. Fluency, processing speed and perceptual reasoning correlated positively with the interhemispheric inferior parietal lobe connection in patients and controls. CONCLUSION: Decreased interhemispheric connections after stroke in childhood may indicate a disruption of typical interhemispheric interactions relating to executive functions. The present results emphasize the relationship between functional organization of the brain at rest and cognitive processes.

YNICL Journal 2018 Journal Article

The cortical signature of impaired gesturing: Findings from schizophrenia

  • Petra Verena Viher
  • Katharina Stegmayer
  • Marek Kubicki
  • Sarina Karmacharya
  • Amanda Ellis Lyall
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Tim Vanbellingen
  • Stephan Bohlhalter

Schizophrenia is characterized by deficits in gesturing that is important for nonverbal communication. Research in healthy participants and brain-damaged patients revealed a left-lateralized fronto-parieto-temporal network underlying gesture performance. First evidence from structural imaging studies in schizophrenia corroborates these results. However, as of yet, it is unclear if cortical thickness abnormalities contribute to impairments in gesture performance. We hypothesized that patients with deficits in gesture production show cortical thinning in 12 regions of interest (ROIs) of a gesture network relevant for gesture performance and recognition. Forty patients with schizophrenia and 41 healthy controls performed hand and finger gestures as either imitation or pantomime. Group differences in cortical thickness between patients with deficits, patients without deficits, and controls were explored using a multivariate analysis of covariance. In addition, the relationship between gesture recognition and cortical thickness was investigated. Patients with deficits in gesture production had reduced cortical thickness in eight ROIs, including the pars opercularis of the inferior frontal gyrus, the superior and inferior parietal lobes, and the superior and middle temporal gyri. Gesture recognition correlated with cortical thickness in fewer, but mainly the same, ROIs within the patient sample. In conclusion, our results show that impaired gesture production and recognition in schizophrenia is associated with cortical thinning in distinct areas of the gesture network.

YNICL Journal 2016 Journal Article

Cerebral white matter structure is associated with DSM-5 schizophrenia symptom dimensions

  • Petra V. Viher
  • Katharina Stegmayer
  • Stéphanie Giezendanner
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Stephan Bohlhalter
  • Tim Vanbellingen
  • Roland Wiest
  • Werner Strik

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies have provided evidence of widespread white matter (WM) abnormalities in schizophrenia. Although these abnormalities appear clinically significant, the relationship to specific clinical symptoms is limited and heterogeneous. This study examined the association between WM microstructure and the severity of the five main DSM-5 schizophrenia symptom dimensions. DTI was measured in forty patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Using Tract-Based Spatial Statistics controlling for age, gender and antipsychotic dosage, our analyses revealed significant negative relationships between WM microstructure and two DSM-5 symptom dimensions: Whereas abnormal psychomotor behavior was particularly related to WM of motor tracts, negative symptoms were associated with WM microstructure of the prefrontal and right temporal lobes. However, we found no associations between WM microstructure and delusions, hallucinations or disorganized speech. These data highlight the relevance of characteristic WM disconnectivity patterns as markers for negative symptoms and abnormal psychomotor behavior in schizophrenia and provide evidence for relevant associations between brain structure and aberrant behavior.

YNICL Journal 2016 Journal Article

T2-relaxometry predicts outcome of DBS in idiopathic Parkinson's disease

  • Tarja Lönnfors-Weitzel
  • Thilo Weitzel
  • Johannes Slotboom
  • Claus Kiefer
  • Claudio Pollo
  • Michael Schüpbach
  • Markus Oertel
  • Alain Kaelin

INTRODUCTION: Deep brain stimulation (DBS) nowadays is a well-established treatment of motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease. The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is a common target for DBS, because motor improvements have been shown to be superior to best medical therapy, if DBS electrodes have been appropriately positioned. DBS target identification can be assisted by MRI beyond structural imaging by spatially resolved measurement of T2-relaxation times (T2r). AIM: We pose the question, whether T2r of the STN is linked to the severity of the disease and whether outcome of DBS may be correlated to an asymmetric manifestation of the disease. Further, we investigated if abnormal T2r in the STN may be predictive for outcome of DBS. METHODS: Twelve patients underwent preoperative MR imaging including a multi echo relaxometry sequence (3 Tesla, Siemens Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany) ahead of DBS. T2r were determined for STN, substantia nigra (SN), red nucleus (RN) and centrum semiovale (CSO). Unified Parkinson's disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) scores were tested before and after DBS. Patients' T2r and deduced values representing left-right asymmetry of measurements were correlated with UPDRS scores and measures for outcome of DBS. Furthermore, patients' T2r were compared with T2r measurements in 12 healthy controls (HC). RESULTS: Patients' T2r for SN (mean 45.4 ms ± 4.4 ms) and STN (mean 56.4 ms ± 3.8 ms) were significantly shorter than T2r in HCs for SN (mean 60.7 ± 4.6) and STN (mean 66.1 ms ± 4.0 ms). While no mean T2r asymmetry was found in the SN, patients' mean T2r for STN showed a weakened left-right correlation (Pearson correlation coefficient 0.19 versus 0.72 in HC) indicating asymmetric degeneration. T2r asymmetry was not linked to the more severely affected hemisphere. The respective lower T2r within the left or right target region was significantly correlated to the outcome in terms of UPDRS III improvement in "off" state (Pearson correlation 0.82 corresponding to p ≪ 0.01). Patients with T2r of STN lower than 50 ms showed no response to DBS in the UPDRS. The maximum T2r for SN correlated to the improvement between UPDRS "off" minus and "on" (Dopamine response) but failed to predict DBS outcome. CONCLUSIONS: The lower boundaries of T2r in the STN predict motor outcome in DBS. T2r asymmetry in the STN is not associated with increased clinical symptoms, but with response to therapy. Thus, patients with very low T2r may be inappropriate candidates for DBS.

YNIMG Journal 2015 Journal Article

Rivalry of homeostatic and sensory-evoked emotions: Dehydration attenuates olfactory disgust and its neural correlates

  • Lea Meier
  • Hergen Friedrich
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Kay Jann
  • Yosuke Morishima
  • Basile Nicolas Landis
  • Roland Wiest
  • Werner Strik

Neural correlates have been described for emotions evoked by states of homeostatic imbalance (e. g. thirst, hunger, and breathlessness) and for emotions induced by external sensory stimulation (such as fear and disgust). However, the neurobiological mechanisms of their interaction, when they are experienced simultaneously, are still unknown. We investigated the interaction on the neurobiological and the perceptional level using subjective ratings, serum parameters, and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in a situation of emotional rivalry, when both a homeostatic and a sensory-evoked emotion were experienced at the same time. Twenty highly dehydrated male subjects rated a disgusting odor as significantly less repulsive when they were thirsty. On the neurobiological level, we found that this reduction in subjective disgust during thirst was accompanied by a significantly reduced neural activity in the insular cortex, a brain area known to be considerably involved in processing of disgust. Furthermore, during the experience of disgust in the satiated condition, we observed a significant functional connectivity between brain areas responding to the disgusting odor, which was absent during the stimulation in the thirsty condition. These results suggest interference of conflicting emotions: an acute homeostatic imbalance can attenuate the experience of another emotion evoked by the sensory perception of a potentially harmful external agent. This finding offers novel insights with regard to the behavioral relevance of biologically different types of emotions, indicating that some types of emotions are more imperative for behavior than others. As a general principle, this modulatory effect during the conflict of homeostatic and sensory-evoked emotions may function to safeguard survival.

YNICL Journal 2014 Journal Article

Ventral striatum gray matter density reduction in patients with schizophrenia and psychotic emotional dysregulation

  • Katharina Stegmayer
  • Helge Horn
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Nadja Razavi
  • Tobias Bracht
  • Karin Laimböck
  • Werner Strik
  • Thomas Dierks

INTRODUCTION: Substantial heterogeneity remains across studies investigating changes in gray matter in schizophrenia. Differences in methodology, heterogeneous symptom patterns and symptom trajectories may contribute to inconsistent findings. To address this problem, we recently proposed to group patients by symptom dimensions, which map on the language, the limbic and the motor systems. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether patients with prevalent symptoms of emotional dysregulation would show structural neuronal abnormalities in the limbic system. METHOD: 43 right-handed medicated patients with schizophrenia were assessed with the Bern Psychopathology Scale (BPS). The patients and a control group of 34 healthy individuals underwent structural imaging at a 3T MRI scanner. Whole brain voxel-based morphometry (VBM) was compared between patient subgroups with different severity of emotional dysregulation. Group comparisons (comparison between patients with severe emotional dysregulation, patients with mild emotional dysregulation, patients with no emotional dysregulation and healthy controls) were performed using a one way ANOVA and ANCOVA respectively. RESULTS: Patients with severe emotional dysregulation had significantly decreased gray matter density in a large cluster including the right ventral striatum and the head of the caudate compared to patients without emotional dysregulation. Comparing patients with severe emotional dysregulation and healthy controls, several clusters of significant decreased GM density were detected in patients, including the right ventral striatum, head of the caudate, left hippocampus, bilateral thalamus, dorsolateral prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortex. The significant effect in the ventral striatum was lost when patients with and without emotional dysregulation were pooled and compared with controls. DISCUSSION: Decreased gray matter density in a large cluster including the right ventral striatum was associated with severe symptoms of emotional dysregulation in patients with schizophrenia. The ventral striatum is an important part of the limbic system, and was indicated to be involved in the generation of incentive salience and psychotic symptoms. Only patients with severe emotional dysregulation had decreased gray matter in several brain structures associated with emotion and reward processing compared to healthy controls. The results support the hypothesis that grouping patients according to specific clinical symptoms matched to the limbic system allows identifying patient subgroups with structural abnormalities in the limbic network.

YNIMG Journal 2012 Journal Article

The link between visual exploration and neuronal activity: A multi-modal study combining eye tracking, functional magnetic resonance imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation

  • Silvia Chaves
  • Patrizia Vannini
  • Kay Jann
  • Pascal Wurtz
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Thomas Nyffeler
  • Mathias Luethi
  • Daniela Hubl

In the present multi-modal study we aimed to investigate the role of visual exploration in relation to the neuronal activity and performance during visuospatial processing. To this end, event related functional magnetic resonance imaging er-fMRI was combined with simultaneous eye tracking recording and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Two groups of twenty healthy subjects each performed an angle discrimination task with different levels of difficulty during er-fMRI. The number of fixations as a measure of visual exploration effort was chosen to predict blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal changes using the general linear model (GLM). Without TMS, a positive linear relationship between the visual exploration effort and the BOLD signal was found in a bilateral fronto-parietal cortical network, indicating that these regions reflect the increased number of fixations and the higher brain activity due to higher task demands. Furthermore, the relationship found between the number of fixations and the performance demonstrates the relevance of visual exploration for visuospatial task solving. In the TMS group, offline theta bursts TMS (TBS) was applied over the right posterior parietal cortex (PPC) before the fMRI experiment started. Compared to controls, TBS led to a reduced correlation between visual exploration and BOLD signal change in regions of the fronto-parietal network of the right hemisphere, indicating a disruption of the network. In contrast, an increased correlation was found in regions of the left hemisphere, suggesting an intent to compensate functionality of the disturbed areas. TBS led to fewer fixations and faster response time while keeping accuracy at the same level, indicating that subjects explored more than actually needed.

YNIMG Journal 2012 Journal Article

Theta burst TMS increases cerebral blood flow in the primary motor cortex during motor performance as assessed by arterial spin labeling (ASL)

  • Ariane Orosz
  • Kay Jann
  • Miranka Wirth
  • Roland Wiest
  • Thomas Dierks
  • Andrea Federspiel

Theta burst stimulation (TBS) is a novel variant of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), which induces changes in neuronal excitability persisting up to 1h. When elicited in the primary motor cortex, such physiological modulations might also have an impact on motor behavior. In the present study, we applied TBS in combination with pseudo continuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL) in order to address the question of whether TBS effects are measurable by means of changes in physiological parameters such as cerebral blood flow (CBF) and if TBS-induced plasticity can modify motor behavior. Twelve right-handed healthy subjects were stimulated using an inhibitory TBS protocol at subthreshold stimulation intensity targeted over the right motor cortex. The control condition consisted of within-subject Sham treatment in a crossover design. PCASL was performed before (pre TBS/pre Sham) and immediately after treatment (post TBS/post Sham). During the pCASL runs, the subjects performed a sequential fingertapping task with the left hand at individual maximum speed. There was a significant increase of CBF in the primary motor cortex after TBS, but not after Sham. It is assumed that inhibitory TBS induced a “local virtual lesion” which leads to the mobilization of more neuronal resources. There was no TBS-specific modulation in motor behavior, which might indicate that acute changes in brain plasticity caused by TBS are immediately compensated. This compensatory reaction seems to be observable at the metabolic, but not at the behavioral level.

YNIMG Journal 2011 Journal Article

Semantic memory involvement in the default mode network: A functional neuroimaging study using independent component analysis

  • Miranka Wirth
  • Kay Jann
  • Thomas Dierks
  • Andrea Federspiel
  • Roland Wiest
  • Helge Horn

The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a higher order functional neural network that displays activation during passive rest and deactivation during many types of cognitive tasks. Accordingly, the DMN is viewed to represent the neural correlate of internally-generated self-referential cognition. This hypothesis implies that the DMN requires the involvement of cognitive processes, like declarative memory. The present study thus examines the spatial and functional convergence of the DMN and the semantic memory system. Using an active block-design functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) paradigm and Independent Component Analysis (ICA), we trace the DMN and fMRI signal changes evoked by semantic, phonological and perceptual decision tasks upon visually-presented words. Our findings show less deactivation during semantic compared to the two non-semantic tasks for the entire DMN unit and within left-hemispheric DMN regions, i. e. , the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex, the anterior cingulate cortex, the retrosplenial cortex, the angular gyrus, the middle temporal gyrus and the anterior temporal region, as well as the right cerebellum. These results demonstrate that well-known semantic regions are spatially and functionally involved in the DMN. The present study further supports the hypothesis of the DMN as an internal mentation system that involves declarative memory functions.

YNIMG Journal 2009 Journal Article

Multi-parametric classification of Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment: The impact of quantitative magnetization transfer MR imaging

  • Claus Kiefer
  • Lisa Brockhaus
  • Katja Cattapan-Ludewig
  • Pietro Ballinari
  • Yuliya Burren
  • Gerhard Schroth
  • Roland Wiest

Multi-parametric and quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques have come into the focus of interest, both as a research and diagnostic modality for the evaluation of patients suffering from mild cognitive decline and overt dementia. In this study we address the question, if disease related quantitative magnetization transfer effects (qMT) within the intra- and extracellular matrices of the hippocampus may aid in the differentiation between clinically diagnosed patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and healthy controls. We evaluated 22 patients with AD (n =12) and MCI (n =10) and 22 healthy elderly (n =12) and younger (n =10) controls with multi-parametric MRI. Neuropsychological testing was performed in patients and elderly controls (n =34). In order to quantify the qMT effects, the absorption spectrum was sampled at relevant off-resonance frequencies. The qMT-parameters were calculated according to a two-pool spin-bath model including the T1- and T2 relaxation parameters of the free pool, determined in separate experiments. Histograms (fixed bin-size) of the normalized qMT-parameter values (z-scores) within the anterior and posterior hippocampus (hippocampal head and body) were subjected to a fuzzy-c-means classification algorithm with downstreamed PCA projection. The within-cluster sums of point-to-centroid distances were used to examine the effects of qMT- and diffusion anisotropy parameters on the discrimination of healthy volunteers, patients with Alzheimer and MCIs. The qMT-parameters T2r (T2 of the restricted pool) and F (fractional pool size) differentiated between the three groups (control, MCI and AD) in the anterior hippocampus. In our cohort, the MT ratio, as proposed in previous reports, did not differentiate between MCI and AD or healthy controls and MCI, but between healthy controls and AD.

YNIMG Journal 2008 Journal Article

BOLD correlates of continuously fluctuating epileptic activity isolated by independent component analysis

  • Kay Jann
  • Roland Wiest
  • Martinus Hauf
  • Klaus Meyer
  • Chris Boesch
  • Johannes Mathis
  • Gerhard Schroth
  • Thomas Dierks

Combined EEG/fMRI recordings offer a promising opportunity to detect brain areas with altered BOLD signal during interictal epileptic discharges (IEDs). These areas are likely to represent the irritative zone, which is itself a reflection of the epileptogenic zone. This paper reports on the imaging findings using independent component analysis (ICA) to continuously quantify epileptiform activity in simultaneously acquired EEG and fMRI. Using ICA derived factors coding for the epileptic activity takes into account that epileptic activity is continuously fluctuating with each spike differing in amplitude, duration and maybe topography, including subthreshold epileptic activity besides clear IEDs and may thus increase the sensitivity and statistical power of combined EEG/fMRI in epilepsy. Twenty patients with different types of focal and generalized epilepsy syndromes were investigated. ICA separated epileptiform activity from normal physiological brain activity and artifacts. In 16/20 patients, BOLD correlates of epileptic activity matched the EEG sources, the clinical semiology, and, if present, the structural lesions. In clinically equivocal cases, the BOLD correlates aided to attribute proper diagnosis of the underlying epilepsy syndrome. Furthermore, in one patient with temporal lobe epilepsy, BOLD correlates of rhythmic delta activity could be employed to delineate the affected hippocampus. Compared to BOLD correlates of manually identified IEDs, the sensitivity was improved from 50% (10/20) to 80%. The ICA EEG/fMRI approach is a safe, non-invasive and easily applicable technique, which can be used to identify regions with altered hemodynamic effects related to IEDs as well as intermittent rhythmic discharges in different types of epilepsy.

YNIMG Journal 2006 Journal Article

Examining the gateway to the limbic system with diffusion tensor imaging: The perforant pathway in dementia

  • Peter Kalus
  • Johannes Slotboom
  • Jürgen Gallinat
  • Richard Mahlberg
  • Katja Cattapan-Ludewig
  • Roland Wiest
  • Thomas Nyffeler
  • Caroline Buri

Current treatments for Alzheimer's disease (AD) are only able to slow the progression of mental deterioration, making early and reliable diagnosis an essential part of any promising therapeutic strategy. In the initial stages of AD, the first neuropathological alterations occur in the perforant pathway (PP), a large neuronal fiber tract located at the entrance to the limbic system. However, to date, there is no sensitive diagnostic tool for performing in vivo assessments of this structure. In the present bimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study, we examined 10 elderly controls, 10 subjects suffering from mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and 10 AD patients in order to evaluate the sensitivity of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), a new MRI technique, for detecting changes in the PP. Furthermore, the diagnostic explanatory power of DTI data of the PP should be compared to high-resolution MRI volumetry and intervoxel coherences (COH) of the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex, two limbic regions also involved in the pathophysiology of early AD. DTI revealed a marked decrease in COH values in the PP region of MCI (right side: 26%, left side: 29%, as compared to controls) and AD patients (right side: 37%, left side: 43%, as compared to controls). Reductions in COH values of the PP region were significantly correlated with cognitive impairment. DTI data of the PP zone were the only parameter differing significantly between control subjects and MCI patients, while the volumetric measures and the COH values of the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex did not. DTI of medial temporal brain regions is a promising non-invasive tool for the in vivo diagnosis of the early/preclinical stages of AD.