Dynamic Resting State Motor Network Connectivity of Neurotypical Children, the Groundwork for Network-Guided Therapy in Childhood Movement Disorders

Author:

Sussman Bethany L.ORCID,Wyckoff Sarah N.ORCID,Fine Justin M.,Heim Jennifer,Wilfong Angus A.,Adelson P. David,Kruer Michael C.,Boerwinkle Varina L.

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNormative childhood motor network resting-state fMRI effective connectivity is undefined, yet necessary for translatable dynamic resting-state network informed treatments in pediatric movement disorders.MethodCross-spectral dynamic causal modelling of resting-state fMRI was investigated in 19 neurotypically developing 5-7-year-old children. Fully connected six-node motor network models were created for each hemisphere including primary motor cortex, striatum, subthalamic nucleus, globus pallidus internus, thalamus, and contralateral cerebellum. Parametric Empirical Bayes with exhaustive Bayesian model reduction and Bayesian modeling averaging were used to create a group model for each hemisphere; Purdue Pegboard Test (PPBT) scores for relevant hand motor behavior were also entered as a covariate at the group level to determine the brain-behavior relationship.ResultsOverall, the resting-state functional MRI effective connectivity of motor cortico-basal ganglia-cerebellar networks was similar across hemispheres, with greater connectivity in the left hemisphere. The motor network effective connectivity relationships between the nodes were consistent and robust across subjects. Additionally, the PPBT score for each hand was positively correlated with the thalamus to contralateral cerebellum connection.DiscussionThe normative effective connectivity from resting-state functional MRI in children largely reflect the direction of inter-nodal signal predicted by other prior modalities and was consistent and robust across subjects, with differences from these prior task-dependent modalities that likely reflect the motor rest-action state during acquisition. Effective connectivity of the motor network was correlated with motor behavior, indicating effective connectivity brain-behavior relationship has physiological meaning in the normally developing. Thus, it may be helpful for future studies in children with movement disorders, wherein comparison to normative effective connectivity will be critical for network-targeted intervention.Impact StatementThis is the first study to use pediatric resting-state functional MRI to create a normative effective connectivity model of the motor network and to also show correlation with behavior, which may have therapeutic implications for children with movement disorders.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference70 articles.

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