Abnormal connection between the posterior insula and the gastric network among patients with functional constipation
Dehua Zha, Jiajing Chen, Yanyan Yang, Liang Zhang, Shaohua Tao, Wei Wang, Ming Li

TL;DR
The study found that patients with functional constipation have reduced brain connectivity between the posterior insula and a gastric network, which may explain their gastrointestinal and psychological symptoms.
Contribution
This study identifies a novel neuroimaging feature of functional constipation involving the posterior insula and gastric network.
Findings
Functional constipation patients showed significantly decreased connectivity between the left posterior insula and gastric network.
Reduced connectivity was negatively correlated with constipation symptom severity scores.
The posterior insula is strongly connected to the gastric network in healthy individuals.
Abstract
Functional constipation (FCon) is frequently accompanied by psychological disorders, implicating the interaction between the gastrointestinal symptom and brain dysfunction in FCon. Recent studies combining electrogastrogram and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) have reported a novel gastric network. Besides, the fMRI activity of the gastric network was also coupled with the insular fMRI signal. However, little is known about the connection between the gastric network and the insula in FCon. Based on rs-fMRI, functional connectivity (FC) using a large sample of 652 healthy subjects identified the insular cortex as the most closely linked to the gastric network. Then, seed-based FC and dynamic functional connectivity of the gastric network and the gastric-related insular cortex were calculated and compared in 35 patients with FCon and 36 healthy controls.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastrointestinal motility and disorders · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Infant Health and Development
