Visuo‐vestibular and cognitive connections of the vestibular neuromatrix are conserved across age and injury populations

Author:

Smith Jeremy L.1ORCID,Diekfuss Jed A.234,Dudley Jonathan A.5,Ahluwalia Vishwadeep6,Zuleger Taylor M.2347ORCID,Slutsky‐Ganesh Alexis B.24,Yuan Weihong58,Foss Kim D. Barber2,Gore Russell K.910,Myer Gregory D.23411,Allen Jason W.11012

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

2. Emory Sports Performance and Research Center (SPARC) Flowery Branch Georgia USA

3. Emory Sports Medicine Center Atlanta Georgia USA

4. Department of Orthopaedics Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

5. Pediatric Neuroimaging Research Consortium, Division of Radiology Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati Ohio USA

6. Georgia State University/Georgia Tech Center for Advanced Brain Imaging (CABI) Atlanta Georgia USA

7. Neuroscience Graduate Program University of Cincinnati Cincinnati Ohio USA

8. Department of Radiology University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio USA

9. Mild TBI Brain Health and Recovery Lab Shepherd Center Atlanta Georgia USA

10. Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

11. Youth Physical Development Centre Cardiff Metropolitan University Wales UK

12. Department of Neurology Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and PurposeGiven the prevalence of vestibular dysfunction in pediatric concussion, there is a need to better understand pathophysiological disruptions within vestibular and associated cognitive, affective, and sensory‐integrative networks. Although current research leverages established intrinsic connectivity networks, these are nonspecific for vestibular function, suggesting that a pathologically guided approach is warranted. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the generalizability of the previously identified “vestibular neuromatrix” in adults with and without postconcussive vestibular dysfunction to young athletes aged 14‐17.MethodsThis retrospective study leveraged resting‐state functional MRI data from two sites. Site A included adults with diagnosed postconcussive vestibular impairment and healthy adult controls and Site B consisted of young athletes with preseason, postconcussion, and postseason time points (prospective longitudinal data). Adjacency matrices were generated from preprocessed resting‐state data from each sample and assessed for overlap and network structure in MATLAB.ResultsAnalyses indicated the presence of a conserved “core” network of vestibular regions as well as areas subserving visual, spatial, and attentional processing. Other vestibular connections were also conserved across samples but were not linked to the “core” subnetwork by regions of interest included in this study.ConclusionsOur results suggest that connections between central vestibular, visuospatial, and known intrinsic connectivity networks are conserved across adult and pediatric participants with and without concussion, evincing the significance of this expanded, vestibular‐associated network. Our findings thus support this network as a workable model for investigation in future studies of dysfunction in young athlete populations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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