Functional Brain Connectivity and Neurocognitive Functioning in Patients With Long-Standing Type 1 Diabetes With and Without Microvascular Complications

Author:

van Duinkerken Eelco1,Klein Martin2,Schoonenboom Niki S.M.3,Hoogma Roel P.L.M.4,Moll Annette C.5,Snoek Frank J.2,Stam Cornelis J.3,Diamant Michaela6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Psychology and Endocrinology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands;

2. Department of Medical Psychology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands;

3. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology and MEG Center, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands;

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Groene Hart Hospital, Gouda, the Netherlands;

5. Department of Ophthalmology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands;

6. Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes Center, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Hyperglycemia-associated microvascular disease may underlie changes in cerebral functioning and cognitive performance in patients with type 1 diabetes. Functional connectivity, an indicator of functional interactions and information exchange between brain regions, provides a measure of cerebral functioning. This study addresses functional connectivity and cognition in type 1 diabetic patients with and without proliferative retinopathy, relative to healthy control subjects, using magnetoencephalography. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Fluctuations in magnetic field at scalp for Δ, θ, lower and upper α, β, and lower and upper γ frequency bands were measured using magnetoencephalography. Synchronization likelihood, a measure of functional connectivity, was computed. Using neuropsychological tests, cognitive functioning was assessed and its associations with functional connectivity were determined. RESULTS Compared with control subjects, type 1 diabetic patients performed poorer on general cognitive ability, information processing speed, and motor speed, irrespective of their microvascular complication status. Functional connectivity, however, was lowest for type 1 diabetic patients with retinopathy, compared with type 1 diabetic patients without microvascular complications and control subjects, whereas type 1 diabetic patients without microvascular complications showed an increase relative to control subjects. Positive associations were found between functional connectivity and executive functioning, memory, information processing speed, motor speed, and attention. CONCLUSIONS Compared with healthy control subjects, functional connectivity and cognition differed in type 1 diabetic patients irrespective of microvascular complication status, indicating that chronic hyperglycemia, among other factors, may negatively affect brain functioning even before microvascular damage becomes manifest. The association found between synchronization likelihood and cognition suggests functional connectivity plays a significant role in cognitive functioning.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference43 articles.

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