DYSFUNCTIONAL INTERACTIONS OF SALIENCE NETWORK IN EARLY PSYCHOSIS
*Lei Zhao, Qijing Bo, Chuanyue WangAbstract
Background
Currently, there is increasing attention paid to early psychiatric populations such as first episode of schizophrenia (FES) and clinical high risk for schizophrenia (CHR). Research based on static functional connectivity (FC) has unanimously recognized functional abnormalities in the salience network (SN) of schizophrenia, but there is still controversy over whether these abnormalities will fully extend to the early stages of mental illness.
Aims
The aim of this study is to evaluate the functional interaction characteristics of early psychiatric salience networks based on network level assessment.
Methods
This study focuses on data from 26 cases of FES, 20 cases of CHR, and 37 healthy controls (HC). Based on network level, static FC analysis method is used to explore the functional connectivity characteristics within the early mental patient population's saliency network and with advanced cognitive networks (DMN, CEN) and sensory networks (SMN, AN, VN). Use analysis of variance or Kruskal Wallis H-test to compare the intergroup differences of the above indicators, and Spearman correlation analysis to explore the brain behavioral correlation between intergroup difference indicators and clinical and cognitive data of early psychiatric patients.
Results
Static functional connectivity analysis found that compared to HC, the FC between FES salient network and default network, auditory network decreased or showed a decreasing trend (PSN-DMN=0.038, PSN-AN=0.066).
Conclusion
Abnormal functional interaction between early psychiatric prominence networks, advanced cognitive networks, and sensory networks in a resting state.