Convergent and divergent functional connectivity patterns in patients with long-term left-sided and right-sided deafness

•Common reduction of FCS in ipsilateral visual cortex was observed in LD and RD.•Higher FCS was found in some regions of salience and default-mode network in RD, while this pattern was not found in LD.•The functional changes of brain in single-sided deafness were highly deafness-side-dependent. Cort...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience letters 2018-02, Vol.665, p.74-79
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Yanyang, Mao, Zhiqi, Feng, Shiyu, Wang, Wenxin, Zhang, Jun, Yu, Xinguang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Common reduction of FCS in ipsilateral visual cortex was observed in LD and RD.•Higher FCS was found in some regions of salience and default-mode network in RD, while this pattern was not found in LD.•The functional changes of brain in single-sided deafness were highly deafness-side-dependent. Cortical reorganization may be induced in long-term single-sided deafness (SD); however, the influence of the deafness side on the functional changes remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated whole-brain functional connectivity patterns in long-term SD patients. The normalized voxel-based functional connectivity strength (FCS) was determined using resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) in 17 left-sided deafness (LD) patients, 21 right-sided deafness (RD) patients and 21 healthy controls (HCs). Relative to the HCs, both the LD and RD patients exhibited a reduction in the FCS in the ipsilateral visual cortex. However, compared to that in the HCs, a significantly higher FCS was observed in some regions in the salience and default-mode networks in the RD patients, but this FCS alternation pattern was not observed in the LD patients. A direct comparison of the two patient groups revealed a significantly increased FCS in the supplemental motor area in the LD group. Altogether, the long-term SD groups with LD and RD exhibited convergent and divergent functional connectivity patterns in whole-brain networks, providing promising evidence that the functional changes in long-term SD are highly deafness-side-dependent.
ISSN:0304-3940
1872-7972
DOI:10.1016/j.neulet.2017.11.050