2016
DOI: 10.1038/srep38653
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EEG functional network topology is associated with disability in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Abstract: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is one of the most severe neurodegenerative diseases, which is known to affect upper and lower motor neurons. In contrast to the classical tenet that ALS represents the outcome of extensive and progressive impairment of a fixed set of motor connections, recent neuroimaging findings suggest that the disease spreads along vast non-motor connections. Here, we hypothesised that functional network topology is perturbed in ALS, and that this reorganization is associated with disab… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, with regard to the identification of potential correlations between measures of network reorganization and disability scores in patients with ALS, a recent resting-state EEG analysis revealed that some network metrics-such as the degree distribution (k), the leaf fraction (fraction of nodes with degree 1), and the tree hierarchy-were significantly different in a cohort of ALS patients compared to healthy controls. 76 Interestingly, those measures were also shown to be linearly related to disability score.…”
Section: Insights From Rs-fmri and Multimodal Studiesmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Moreover, with regard to the identification of potential correlations between measures of network reorganization and disability scores in patients with ALS, a recent resting-state EEG analysis revealed that some network metrics-such as the degree distribution (k), the leaf fraction (fraction of nodes with degree 1), and the tree hierarchy-were significantly different in a cohort of ALS patients compared to healthy controls. 76 Interestingly, those measures were also shown to be linearly related to disability score.…”
Section: Insights From Rs-fmri and Multimodal Studiesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Thus, these results seem to confirm the hypothesis that high time resolution techniques, such as MEG, might be able to capture alterations of brain functional activity also in the preclinical stage of disease. Moreover, with regard to the identification of potential correlations between measures of network reorganization and disability scores in patients with ALS, a recent resting-state EEG analysis revealed that some network metrics—such as the degree distribution ( k ), the leaf fraction (fraction of nodes with degree 1), and the tree hierarchy—were significantly different in a cohort of ALS patients compared to healthy controls 76 . Interestingly, those measures were also shown to be linearly related to disability score.
Figure 4Patterns of event-related desynchronization in ALS patients compared to healthy controls during swallowing.
…”
Section: Connectivity and Brain Network Changes In The Als–ftld Contimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Network structures can also be summarized using graph theory metrics, this was explored in sensor-space in 21 patients, demonstrating a more “de-centralised” organization (149). The connectivity metric chosen in this study was phase-based, thus insensitive to any group differences in spectral power, and furthermore was significantly correlated with disability between individuals.…”
Section: Encephalographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent EEG studies have also described FC increases, 12 alongside global reorganization of inferred cortical network topology. 13 Magnetoencephalography (MEG) extends the localization capabilities of noninvasive neurophysiology, 14 negating dispersive effects of skull and scalp. The temporal resolution of MEG offers advantages, relevant in the assessment of dynamic cognitive processes, such as movement preparation, clinically affected by neurodegeneration.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%