Altered modular organization of functional connectivity networks in cirrhotic patients without overt hepatic encephalopathy

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Abstract

Minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) is associated with changes in functional connectivity. To investigate the patterns of modular changes of the functional connectivity in the progression of MHE, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging was acquired in 24 MHE patients, 31 cirrhotic patients without minimal hepatic encephalopathy (non-HE), and 38 healthy controls. Newman's metric, the modularity Q value, was maximized and compared in three groups. Topological roles with the progression of MHE were illustrated by intra- and intermodular connectivity changes. Results showed that the Q value of MHE patients was significantly lower than that of controls P<0.01 rather than that of non-HE patients P>0.05, which was correlated with neuropsychological test scores rather than the ammonia level and Child-Pugh score. Less intrasubcortical connections and more isolated subcortical modules were found with the progression of MHE. The non-HE patients had the same numbers of connect nodes as controls and had more hubs compared with MHE patients and healthy controls. Our findings supported that both intra- and intermodular connectivity, especially those related to subcortical regions, were continuously impaired in cirrhotic patients. The adjustments of hubs and connector nodes in non-HE patients could be a compensation for the decreased modularity in their functional connectivity networks. © 2014 Gang Zheng et al.

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Zheng, G., Zhang, L., Zhang, L. J., Li, Q., Pan, Z., Liang, X., … Lu, G. M. (2014). Altered modular organization of functional connectivity networks in cirrhotic patients without overt hepatic encephalopathy. BioMed Research International, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/727452

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