Background and purpose: Accumulating evidence indicates that dynamic amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (dALFF) or dynamic functional connectivity (dFC) can provide complementary information, distinct from static amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (sALFF) or static functional connectivity (sFC), in detecting brain functional abnormalities in brain diseases. We aimed to examine whether dALFF and dFC can offer valuable information for the detection of functional brain abnormalities in patients with blepharospasm. Methods:We collected resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 46 patients each of blepharospasm, hemifacial spasm (HFS), and healthy controls (HCs).We examined intergroup differences in sALFF and dALFF to investigate abnormal regional brain activity in patients with blepharospasm. Based on the dALFF results, we conducted seed-based sFC and dFC analyses to identify static and dynamic connectivity changes in brain networks centered on areas showing abnormal temporal variability of local brain activity in patients with blepharospasm.Results: Compared with HCs, patients with blepharospasm displayed different brain functional change patterns characterized by increased sALFF in the left primary motor cortex (PMC) but increased dALFF variance in the right PMC. However, differences were not found between patients with HFS and HCs. Additionally, patients with blepharospasm exhibited decreased dFC strength, but no change in sFC, between right PMC and ipsilateral cerebellum compared with HCs; these findings were replicated when patients with blepharospasm were compared to those with HFS. Conclusions:Our findings highlight that dALFF and dFC are complementary to sALFF and sFC and can provide valuable information for detecting brain functional abnormalities in blepharospasm. Blepharospasm may be a network disorder involving the cortico-pontocerebello-thalamo-cortical circuit.
Blepharospasm is traditionally thought to be a movement disorder that results from basal ganglia dysfunction. Recently, accumulating morphometric studies have revealed structural alterations outside the basal ganglia, such as in the brainstem, cerebellum, and sensorimotor cortex, suggesting that blepharospasm may result from network disorders. However, the temporal and causal relationships between structural alterations, and whether there are disease duration-related hierarchical structural changes in these patients remain largely unknown. Structural magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 62 patients with blepharospasm, 62 patients with hemifacial spasm, and 62 healthy controls to assess the structural alterations using voxel-based morphology and structural covariance networks. The use of the causal structural covariance network, modularity analysis, and functional decoding were subsequently performed to map the causal effect of gray matter change pattern, hierarchical topography, and functional characterizations of the structural network throughout the disease duration of blepharospasm. Greater gray matter volume in the left and right supplementary motor areas was identified in patients with blepharospasm compared to that in patients with hemifacial spasm and healthy controls, whereas no significant difference was identified between patients with hemifacial spasm and healthy controls. In addition, increased gray matter volume covariance between the right supplementary motor area and right brainstem, left superior frontal gyrus, left supplementary motor area, and left paracentral gyrus was found in patients with blepharospasm compared to healthy controls. Further causal structural covariance network, modularity analysis, and functional decoding showed that the right supplementary motor area served as a driving core in patients with blepharospasm, extending greater gray matter volume to areas in the cortico-basal ganglia-brainstem motor pathway and cortical regions in the vision-motor integration pathway. Taken together, our results suggest that the right supplementary motor area is an early and important pathologically impaired region in patients with blepharospasm. With a longer duration of blepharospasm, increased gray matter volume extends from the right supplementary motor area to the cortico-basal ganglia motor and visual-motor integration pathways, showing a hierarchy of structural abnormalities in the disease progression of blepharospasm, which provides novel evidence to support the notion that blepharospasm may arise from network disorders and is associated with a wide range of gray matter abnormalities.
BackgroundStructural changes occur in brain regions involved in cortico-basal ganglia networks in idiopathic blepharospasm (iBSP); whether these changes influence the function connectivity patterns of cortico-basal ganglia networks remains largely unknown. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the global integrative state and organization of functional connections of cortico-basal ganglia networks in patients with iBSP.MethodsResting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data and clinical measurements were acquired from 62 patients with iBSP, 62 patients with hemifacial spasm (HFS), and 62 healthy controls (HCs). Topological parameters and functional connections of cortico-basal ganglia networks were evaluated and compared among the three groups. Correlation analyses were performed to explore the relationship between topological parameters and clinical measurements in patients with iBSP.ResultsWe found significantly increased global efficiency and decreased shortest path length and clustering coefficient of cortico-basal ganglia networks in patients with iBSP compared with HCs, however, such differences were not observed between patients with HFS and HCs. Further correlation analyses revealed that these parameters were significantly correlated with the severity of iBSP. At the regional level, the functional connectivity between the left orbitofrontal area and left primary somatosensory cortex and between the right anterior part of pallidum and right anterior part of dorsal anterior cingulate cortex was significantly decreased in patients with iBSP and HFS compared with HCs.ConclusionDysfunction of the cortico-basal ganglia networks occurs in patients with iBSP. The altered network metrics of cortico-basal ganglia networks might be served as quantitative markers for evaluation of the severity of iBSP.
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