To access the full text documents, please follow this link: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/139672

Structural brain network reorganization and social cognition related to adverse perinatal condition from infancy to early adolescence
Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Fischi Gomez, Elda; Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Borradori Tolsa, Cristina; Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Thiran, Jean Philippe; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard; Hüppi, Petra S.
Adverse conditions during fetal life have been associated to both structural and functional changes in neurodevelopment from the neonatal period to adolescence. In this study, connectomics was used to assess the evolution of brain networks from infancy to early adolescence. Brain network reorganization over time in subjects who had suffered adverse perinatal conditions is characterized and related to neurodevelopment and cognition. Three cohorts of prematurely born infants and children (between 28 and 35 weeks of gestational age), including individuals with a birth weight appropriated for gestational age and with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), were evaluated at 1, 6, and 10 years of age, respectively. A common developmental trajectory of brain networks was identified in both control and IUGR groups: network efficiencies of the fractional anisotropy (FA)-weighted and normalized connectomes increase with age, which can be related to maturation and myelination of fiber connections while the number of connections decreases, which can be associated to an axonal pruning process and reorganization. Comparing subjects with or without IUGR, a similar pattern of network differences between groups was observed in the three developmental stages, mainly characterized by IUGR group having reduced brain network efficiencies in binary and FA-weighted connectomes and increased efficiencies in the connectome normalized by its total connection strength (FA). Associations between brain networks and neurobehavioral impairments were also evaluated showing a relationship between different network metrics and specific social cognition-related scores, as well as a higher risk of inattention/hyperactivity and/or executive functional disorders in IUGR children.
-Retard del creixement intrauterí
-Neurobiologia del desenvolupament
-Infants
-Adolescència
-Fetal growth retardation
-Developmental neurobiology
-Children
-Adolescence
cc-by (c) Muñoz-Moreno, Emma et al., 2016
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es
Article
Article - Published version
Frontiers Media
         

Show full item record

Related documents

Other documents of the same author

Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Fischi Gomez, Elda; Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Borradori Tolsa, Cristina; Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Thiran, Jean Philippe; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard; Hüppi, Petra S.
Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Illa, Miriam; Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Arbat-Plana, Ariadna; Amat-Roldan, Ivan; Figueras Retuerta, Francesc; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard
Illa Armengol, Míriam; Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Arbat-Plana, Ariadna; Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Figueras Retuerta, Francesc; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard
Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Arbat-Plana, Ariadna; Illa Armengol, Míriam; Figueras Retuerta, Francesc; Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard
Eixarch Roca, Elisenda; Muñoz-Moreno, Emma; Bargalló Alabart, Núria​; Batallé Bolaño, Dafnis; Gratacós Solsona, Eduard
 

Coordination

 

Supporters