Altered resting‐state functional connectivity in the prefrontal cortex is related to the development of dyscalculia in patients with Turner syndrome

Author:

Li Tian1ORCID,Cheng Dazhi12ORCID,Chen Chuansheng3,Gong Gaolang1,Lv Jing1,Zhou Xinlin1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. School of Psychology Capital Normal University Beijing China

3. Department of Psychological Science University of California Irvine California USA

Abstract

AimPatients with Turner syndrome have a high rate of developmental dyscalculia, but the underlying neurocognitive mechanisms are not well‐understood. Some studies have implicated visuospatial impairments in patients with Turner syndrome, but others have focused on poor procedural skills in patients with Turner syndrome. This study used brain imaging data to test these two alternative views.MethodsThis study recruited 44 girls with Turner syndrome (mean age,  12.91 years; SD,  2.02), with 13 (29.5%) of them meeting the criterion for developmental dyscalculia, and 14 normally developing girls (mean age,  14.26 years; SD,  2.18) as a comparison group. All participants were given basic mathematical ability tests and an intelligence test and were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging. We compared patients with Turner syndrome who had dyscalculia, patients with Turner syndrome who did not have dyscalculia, and the normal controls in terms of brain structures and resting‐state functional activity.ResultsCompared with normal controls, both groups of patients with Turner syndrome (with or without dyscalculia) showed similarly altered functional connectivity in the occipitoparietal dorsal stream. Importantly, compared with patients with Turner syndrome without dyscalculia and normal controls, patients with Turner syndrome with dyscalculia showed decreased functional connectivity between the prefrontal and the lateral occipital cortex.ConclusionWe concluded that both groups of patients with Turner syndrome shared visual deficits, and patients with Turner syndrome with dyscalculia had a deficit in frontal cortex–based higher cognitive processing. It is not their visuospatial deficits but rather their deficits in higher cognitive processing that are responsible for the development of dyscalculia in patients with Turner syndrome.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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