DOU Weibei
- Professor
- Name (Simplified Chinese):DOU Weibei
- Name (English):DOU Weibei
- Business Address:清华大学罗姆楼4-102
- Contact Information:Email: douwb@tsinghua.edu.cn; Tel: 010-62781703
- Degree:Doctoral degree
- Professional Title:Professor
- Alma Mater:电子科技大学学士、法国雷恩大学硕士、法国卡昂大学博士
- Teacher College:DZGCX
Contact Information
- ZipCode:
- Fax:
- PostalAddress:
- OfficePhone:
- Email:
- Selected Publications
Non-concomitant cortical structural and functional alterations in sensorimotor areas following incomplete spinal cord injury
Release time:2021-12-25 Hits:
- Impact Factor:5.135
- Journal:Neural Regeneration Research.
- Place of Publication:China
- Key Words:anatomical structure; brain plasticity; functional connectivity; functional magnetic resonance imaging; gray matter volume; imaging biomarker; incomplete spinal cord injury; nerve regeneration; network; neural regeneration; non-concomitant; sensorimotor areas.
- Abstract:Brain plasticity, including anatomical changes and functional reorganization, is the physiological basis of functional recovery after spinal cord injury (SCI). The correlation between brain anatomical changes and functional reorganization after SCI is unclear. This study aimed to explore whether alterations of cortical structure and network function are concomitant in sensorimotor areas after incomplete SCI. Eighteen patients with incomplete SCI (mean age 40.94 ± 14.10 years old; male:female, 7:11) and 18 healthy subjects (37.33 ± 11.79 years old; male:female, 7:11) were studied by resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging. Gray matter volume (GMV) and functional connectivity were used to evaluate cortical structure and network function, respectively. There was no significant alteration of GMV in sensorimotor areas in patients with incomplete SCI compared with healthy subjects. Intra-hemispheric functional connectivity between left primary somatosensory cortex (BA1) and left primary motor cortex (BA4), and left BA1 and left somatosensory association cortex (BA5) was decreased, as well as inter-hemispheric functional connectivity between left BA1 and right BA4, left BA1 and right BA5, and left BA4 and right BA5 in patients with SCI. Functional connectivity between both BA4 areas was also decreased. The decreased functional connectivity between the left BA1 and the right BA4 positively correlated with American Spinal Injury Association sensory score in SCI patients. The results indicate that alterations of cortical anatomical structure and network functional connectivity in sensorimotor areas were non-concomitant in patients with incomplete SCI, indicating the network functional changes in sensorimotor areas may not be dependent on anatomic structure. The strength of functional connectivity within sensorimotor areas could serve as a potential imaging biomarker for assessment and prediction of sensory function in patients with incomplete SCI. This trial was registered with the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (registration number: ChiCTR-ROC-17013566).
- Co-author:Huiuwen Luo, Yunxiang Ge, Shuyu Yan, Quan Xu, Yuanyuan Tu, Yanqing Xiao, Qiong Wu, Zhuozhao Zheng, Hongliang Zhao, Yu Pan, Weibei Dou,Weibei Dou
- First Author:Yueheng Wang,Xiao Feng
- Indexed by:Journal paper
- Correspondence Author:Yu Pan, Weibei Dou,Weibei Dou
- Volume:12
- Issue:12
- Page Number:2059-2066
- ISSN No.:1673-5374
- Translation or Not:no
- Date of Publication:2017-12-01