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The developing brain has to adapt to environmental and intrinsic insults after extremely preterm (EPT) birth. Ongoing maturational processes maximize their fit to the environment and this can provide a substrate for neurodevelopmental failures. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to scan 33 children born EPT, at < 27 weeks of gestational age, and 26 full-term controls at 10 years of age. We studied the capability of a brain area to propagate neural information (intrinsic ignition) and its variability across time (node-metastability). This framework was computed for the dorsal attention network (DAN), frontoparietal, default-mode network (DMN), and the salience, limbic, visual, and somatosensory networks. The EPT group showed reduced intrinsic ignition in the DMN and DAN, compared with the controls, and reduced node-metastability in the DMN, DAN, and salience networks. Intrinsic ignition and node-metastability values correlated with cognitive performance at 12 years of age in both groups, but only survived in the term group after adjustment. Preterm birth disturbed the signatures of functional brain organization at rest in 3 core high-order networks: DMN, salience, and DAN. Identifying vulnerable resting-state networks after EPT birth may lead to interventions that aim to rebalance brain function.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/cercor/bhad101

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2023-06-20T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

33

Pages

8101 - 8109

Total pages

8

Keywords

brain development, brain network dynamic, cognitive neurodevelopment, extreme prematurity, Child, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Brain, Brain Mapping, Gestational Age, Infant, Extremely Premature, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Nerve Net, Neural Pathways, Rest, Cognition