Understanding the patterns of brain glucose metabolism and connectivity in hypoxic‐ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness (DOC) may be of positive significance to the accurate assessment of consciousness and the optimization of neuromodulation strategy. We retrospectively analyzed the brain glucose metabolism pattern and its correlation with clinical Coma Recovery Scale‐Revised (CRS‐R) score in six HIE patients with prolonged DOC who had undergone18F‐deoxyglucose brain positron emission tomography scanning (FDG‐PET). We also compared the differences in global metabolic connectivity patterns and the characteristics of several brain networks between HIE patients and healthy controls (HC). The metabolism of multiple brain regions decreased significantly in HIE patients, and the degree of local metabolic preservation was correlated with CRS‐R score. The internal metabolic connectivity of occipital lobe and limbic system in HIE patients decreased, and their metabolic connectivity with frontal lobe, parietal lobe and temporal lobe also decreased. The metabolic connectivity patterns of default mode network, dorsal attention network, salience network, executive control network and subcortex network of HIE also changed compared with HC. The present study suggested that pattern of cerebral glucose metabolism and network connectivity of HIE patients with prolonged DOC were significantly different from those of healthy people.
CITATION STYLE
He, Z., Lu, R., Guan, Y., Wu, Y., Ge, J., Liu, G., … Jia, J. (2022). Brain Metabolic Connectivity Patterns in Patients with Prolonged Disorder of Consciousness after Hypoxic‐Ischemic Injury: A Preliminary Study. Brain Sciences, 12(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12070892
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