DOI: 10.1002/jmri.28948 ISSN:

Associations of Brain Entropy Estimated by Resting State fMRI With Physiological Indices, Body Mass Index, and Cognition

Gianpaolo Del Mauro, Ze Wang
  • Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

Background

In recent years, resting‐state fMRI (rsfMRI)‐based brain entropy (BEN) has gained increasing interest as a tool to characterize brain activity. While previous studies indicate that BEN is correlated with cognition, it remains unclear whether BEN is influenced by other factors that typically affect brain activity measured by fMRI.

Purpose

To investigate the relationship between BEN and physiological indices, including respiratory rate (RR), heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (s‐BP), and body mass index (BMI), and to investigate whether and to what extent the relationship between BEN and cognition is influenced by physiological variables.

Study Type

Retrospective.

Subjects

One thousand two hundred six healthy subjects (mean age: 28.83 ± 3.69 years; 550 male) with rsfMRI datasets selected from the Human Connectome Project (HCP).

Field Strength/Sequence

Multiband echo planar imaging (EPI) sequence at 3.0 Tesla.

Assessment

Neurocognitive, physical health (RR, HR, s‐BP, BMI), and rsfMRI data were retrieved from the HCP datasets. Neurocognition was measured through the total cognition composite (TCC) score provided by HCP. BEN maps were calculated from rsfMRI data.

Statistical Tests

Multiple regression models, pheight‐family wise error (FWE) < 0.05 and pcluster‐FWE < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

Results

BEN was negatively associated with RR (T‐thresholds ranging from 4.75 to 4.8; r‐threshold = |0.15|) and positively associated with s‐BP and BMI (T‐thresholds ranging from 4.75 to 4.8; r‐threshold = |0.15|) in areas overlapping with the default mode network. After controlling the physiological effects, BEN still showed regional associations with TCC, including negative associations (T‐thresholds = 3.09; r‐threshold = |0.1|) in the fronto‐parietal cortex and positive associations (T‐thresholds = 3.09; r‐threshold = |0.1|) in the sensorimotor system (motor network and the limbic system).

Data Conclusions

RR negatively affects rsfMRI‐derived BEN, while s‐BP and BMI positively affect BEN. The positive associations between BEN and cognition in the motor network and the limbic system might indicate a facilitation of information processing in the sensorimotor system.

Evidence Level

3

Technical Efficacy

Stage 3

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