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Although aberrant brain regional responses are reported in social anxiety disorder (SAD), little is known about resting-state functional connectivity at the macroscale network level. This study aims to identify functional network abnormalities using a multivariate data-driven method in a relatively large and homogenous sample of SAD patients, and assess their potential diagnostic value.
Methods
Forty-six SAD patients and 52 demographically-matched healthy controls (HC) were recruited to undergo clinical evaluation and resting-state functional MRI scanning. We used group independent component analysis to characterize the functional architecture of brain resting-state networks (RSNs) and investigate between-group differences in intra-/inter-network functional network connectivity (FNC). Furtherly, we explored the associations of FNC abnormalities with clinical characteristics, and assessed their ability to discriminate SAD from HC using support vector machine analyses.
Results
SAD patients showed widespread intra-network FNC abnormalities in the default mode network, the subcortical network and the perceptual system (i.e. sensorimotor, auditory and visual networks), and large-scale inter-network FNC abnormalities among those high-order and primary RSNs. Some aberrant FNC signatures were correlated to disease severity and duration, suggesting pathophysiological relevance. Furthermore, intrinsic FNC anomalies allowed individual classification of SAD v. HC with significant accuracy, indicating potential diagnostic efficacy.
Conclusions
SAD patients show distinct patterns of functional synchronization abnormalities both within and across large-scale RSNs, reflecting or causing a network imbalance of bottom-up response and top-down regulation in cognitive, emotional and sensory domains. Therefore, this could offer insights into the neurofunctional substrates of SAD.
Appropriate analysis of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) allows the description of spontaneous networks of interaction known as resting-state networks (RSNs). Number of studies has revealed that the normally observed RSNs are frequently and significantly disrupted in neurological disorders. Several analysis methods have been proposed to assess functional connectivity from rs-fMRI. Assessing the functional connectivity between two brain loci can either occur at the individual voxel or the region of interest (ROI) level. The most straightforward method of analysis for functional connectivity is the seed-based or ROI-based method. Despite the extensive application of resting-state imaging modalities to brain disorders, relatively fewer studies have assessed altered connectivity in Parkinson's disease (PD). rs-fMRI studies have described RSNs not only related to motor symptoms, but also to non-motor features of PD, such as cognitive dysfunction. Apathy and depression have been assessed in PD using resting state.
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