Neurometabolic network NMetNet for functional neurological disorder in children and adolescents
Lan; Foster; Charney; Grinsven; Breedlove; Kozlowska; Lin
OBJECTIVES
Functional neurological disorder (FND) in children and adolescents is a biopsychosocially-complex condition characterized by a wide range of neurological symptoms. Using magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study neurometabolites has become an important approach to studying the mechanisms of FND. Unlike previous studies focusing on concentration-level analysis, this study examines conditional dependencies between six neurometabolites: N-acetyl aspartate, creatine, glutathione, choline, myo-inositol, and glutamate. Conditional dependence implies that two neurometabolites have joint variability that is not mediated by other neurometabolites.
METHODS
A Bayesian graphical lasso approach was used to estimate neurometabolites’ conditional dependencies in three regions of interest: the anterior default mode network (aDMN), supplementary motor area (SMA), and posterior default mode network (pDMN). We introduce the term neurometabolic network (NMetNet) to describe these conditional dependencies.
RESULTS
Children and adolescents with FND (vs. healthy controls) showed a loss of conditional dependencies related to creatine and glutathione between the aDMN and SMA/pDMN. Glutathione is the primary antioxidant in the brain. Creatine plays a key role in maintaining bioenergetics and also acts as an antioxidant.
CONCLUSIONS
These findings suggest that FND is characterized by dysregulated bioenergetics and increased vulnerability to oxidative stress. Understanding NMetNet in FND offers novel insights into the disorder’s neurobiology, with implications for therapeutic interventions to restore energy homeostasis and oxidative balance.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Using the graphical modeling, the Neurometabolic network (NMetNet) based on magnetic resonance spectroscopy is an innovative conceptual brain network that provides insights into functional neurological disorder.
• Children diagnosed with functional neurological disorder have a statistically significant loss of neurometabolic dependences of creatine and glutathione between the frontal and parietal/posterior regions, with the most pronounced dysconnectivity observed in those with functional seizures.
• Loss of creatine and glutathione dependencies suggests bioenergetic dysregulation, highlighting oxidative stress as a potential therapeutic target in pediatric functional neurological disorder.
Link (NeuroImage: Clinical) [Open Access]
Lan; Foster; Charney; Grinsven; Breedlove; Kozlowska; Lin
OBJECTIVES
Functional neurological disorder (FND) in children and adolescents is a biopsychosocially-complex condition characterized by a wide range of neurological symptoms. Using magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study neurometabolites has become an important approach to studying the mechanisms of FND. Unlike previous studies focusing on concentration-level analysis, this study examines conditional dependencies between six neurometabolites: N-acetyl aspartate, creatine, glutathione, choline, myo-inositol, and glutamate. Conditional dependence implies that two neurometabolites have joint variability that is not mediated by other neurometabolites.
METHODS
A Bayesian graphical lasso approach was used to estimate neurometabolites’ conditional dependencies in three regions of interest: the anterior default mode network (aDMN), supplementary motor area (SMA), and posterior default mode network (pDMN). We introduce the term neurometabolic network (NMetNet) to describe these conditional dependencies.
RESULTS
Children and adolescents with FND (vs. healthy controls) showed a loss of conditional dependencies related to creatine and glutathione between the aDMN and SMA/pDMN. Glutathione is the primary antioxidant in the brain. Creatine plays a key role in maintaining bioenergetics and also acts as an antioxidant.
CONCLUSIONS
These findings suggest that FND is characterized by dysregulated bioenergetics and increased vulnerability to oxidative stress. Understanding NMetNet in FND offers novel insights into the disorder’s neurobiology, with implications for therapeutic interventions to restore energy homeostasis and oxidative balance.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Using the graphical modeling, the Neurometabolic network (NMetNet) based on magnetic resonance spectroscopy is an innovative conceptual brain network that provides insights into functional neurological disorder.
• Children diagnosed with functional neurological disorder have a statistically significant loss of neurometabolic dependences of creatine and glutathione between the frontal and parietal/posterior regions, with the most pronounced dysconnectivity observed in those with functional seizures.
• Loss of creatine and glutathione dependencies suggests bioenergetic dysregulation, highlighting oxidative stress as a potential therapeutic target in pediatric functional neurological disorder.
Link (NeuroImage: Clinical) [Open Access]
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