Spatiotemporal Heterogeneity of Alzheimer's Disease‐Related Functional Brain Network Dedifferentiation
Roy Massett, Ziwei Zhang, Micaela Chan, Gagan S Wig

TL;DR
This study explores how brain networks break down in Alzheimer's disease, revealing different patterns linked to cognitive decline.
Contribution
The paper introduces a data-driven model to identify subtypes of brain network desegregation in Alzheimer's disease.
Findings
Two subtypes of network segregation changes were identified in Alzheimer's patients.
One subtype involves sensory-motor systems, while the other affects association systems like the default mode network.
These patterns correlate with different cognitive impairment profiles and disease progression stages.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a highly heterogeneous condition both in terms of the distribution of pathology deposition and clinical manifestation. The organization of functional brain networks is related to AD pathology, with recent work showing that higher dementia severity is related to the desegregation of brain networks (Zhang et al., 2023). However, the spatiotemporal heterogeneity of these changes in network segregation and how they contribute to different cognitive deficit profiles remains an open area of research. To contribute to this question, we applied a clustering‐based data‐driven disease progression model to system‐level measures of network organization. We included 754 resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans from cognitively impaired individuals (CDR > 0) enrolled in the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. The correlations of fMRI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Mental Health Research Topics · Neural dynamics and brain function
