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1000 Titel
  • Neurocognitive disorders in the elderly: altered functional resting-state hyperconnectivities in postoperative delirium patients
1000 Autor/in
  1. Winterer, Jeanne |
  2. Ofosu, Kwaku |
  3. Borchers, Friedrich |
  4. Hadzidiakos, Daniel |
  5. Lammers-Lietz, Florian |
  6. Spies, Claudia |
  7. Winterer, Georg |
  8. Zacharias, Norman |
1000 Erscheinungsjahr 2021
1000 Publikationstyp
  1. Artikel |
1000 Online veröffentlicht
  • 2021-04-12
1000 Erschienen in
1000 Quellenangabe
  • 11(1):213
1000 Copyrightjahr
  • 2021
1000 Lizenz
1000 Verlagsversion
  • https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01304-y |
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041755/ |
1000 Publikationsstatus
1000 Sprache der Publikation
1000 Abstract/Summary
  • Postoperative delirium (POD) represents a confusional state during days/weeks after surgery and is particularly frequent in elderly patients. Hardly any fMRI studies were conducted to understand the underlying pathophysiology of POD patients. This prospective observational cohort study aims to examine changes of specific resting-state functional connectivity networks across different time points (pre- and 3-5 months postoperatively) in delirious patients compared to no-POD patients. Two-hundred eighty-three elderly surgical patients underwent preoperative resting-state fMRI (46 POD). One-hundred seventy-eight patients completed postoperative scans (19 POD). For functional connectivity analyses, three functional connectivity networks with seeds located in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), nucleus accumbens (NAcc), and hippocampus were investigated. The relationship of POD and connectivity changes between both time points (course connectivity) were examined (ANOVA). Preoperatively, delirious patients displayed hyperconnectivities across the examined functional connectivity networks. In POD patients, connectivities within NAcc and OFC networks demonstrated a decrease in course connectivity [max. F = 9.03, p = 0.003; F = 4.47, p = 0.036, resp.]. The preoperative hyperconnectivity in the three networks in the patients at risk for developing POD could possibly indicate existing compensation mechanisms for subtle brain dysfunction. The observed pathophysiology of network function in POD patients at least partially involves dopaminergic pathways.
1000 Sacherschließung
lokal Magnetic Resonance Imaging [MeSH]
lokal Article
lokal Aged [MeSH]
lokal Neuroscience
lokal Humans [MeSH]
lokal Prospective Studies [MeSH]
lokal Rest [MeSH]
lokal Predictive markers
lokal Delirium [MeSH]
lokal Prefrontal Cortex [MeSH]
1000 Liste der Beteiligten
  1. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6041-8615|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/T2Zvc3UsIEt3YWt1|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/Qm9yY2hlcnMsIEZyaWVkcmljaA==|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/SGFkemlkaWFrb3MsIERhbmllbA==|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/TGFtbWVycy1MaWV0eiwgRmxvcmlhbg==|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/U3BpZXMsIENsYXVkaWE=|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/V2ludGVyZXIsIEdlb3Jn|https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5794-5716
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1000 Erstellt am 2023-04-26T14:46:59.259+0200
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1000 Zuletzt bearbeitet Thu Oct 19 12:53:34 CEST 2023
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