Abstract

Background

The hypothesis of decreased neural inhibition in dementia has been sparsely studied in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data across patients with different dementia subtypes, and the role of social and demographic heterogeneities on this hypothesis remains to be addressed.

Methods

We inferred regional inhibition by fitting a biophysical whole-brain model (dynamic mean field model with realistic inter-areal connectivity) to fMRI data from 414 participants, including patients with Alzheimer’s disease, behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, and controls. We then investigated the effect of disease condition, and demographic and clinical variables on the local inhibitory feedback, a variable related to the maintenance of balanced neural excitation/inhibition.

Results

Decreased local inhibitory feedback was inferred from the biophysical modeling results in dementia patients, specific to brain areas presenting neurodegeneration. This loss of local inhibition correlated positively with years with disease, and showed differences regarding the gender and geographical origin of the patients. The model correctly reproduced known disease-related changes in functional connectivity.

Conclusions

Results suggest a critical link between abnormal neural and circuit-level excitability levels, the loss of grey matter observed in dementia, and the reorganization of functional connectivity, while highlighting the sensitivity of the underlying biophysical mechanism to demographic and clinical heterogeneities in the patient population.

Details

Title
Biophysical models applied to dementia patients reveal links between geographical origin, gender, disease duration, and loss of neural inhibition
Author
Moguilner, Sebastian; Herzog, Rubén; Yonatan Sanz Perl; Medel, Vicente; Cruzat, Josefina; Coronel, Carlos; Kringelbach, Morten; Deco, Gustavo; Ibáñez, Agustín; Tagliazucchi, Enzo
Pages
1-16
Section
Research
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
17589193
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3037874891
Copyright
© 2024. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.