New dimension in ‘image activity’ in human brain takes new turn: Study
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Babies born prematurely are prone to problems later in life — they’re more likely to develop autism or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and more likely to struggle in school. A new study suggests that the underlying neurological issues may begin in the womb. It’s among the first to investigate brain activity in human foetuses published on January 9. The discoveries provide the first direct evidence of altered brain function in foetuses that go on to be born prematurely, and they might ultimately point to ways to remediate or even prevent such early injuries.
Developmental neuroscientist Moriah Thomason of Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, Michigan, and colleagues report a difference in how certain brain regions communicate with each other in foetuses that were later born prematurely compared with foetuses that were carried to term, the study reports. Although the findings are preliminary because the study was small, Thomason and other researchers say the work illustrates the potential (and the challenges) of the emerging field of fatal neuroimaging. ‘Harnessing the power of these advanced tools is offering us for the very first time the opportunity to explore the onset of neurologic insults that are happening in utero,’ says Catherine Limperopoulos, a paediatric neuroscientist at Children’s National Medical Centre in Washington, D.C.
Thomason and colleagues used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate brain activity in 32 foetuses. The pregnant mothers were participants in a larger, long-term study of brain development led by Thomason. ‘The majority have just normal pregnancies, but they’re drawn from a low-resource population that’s at greater risk of early delivery and developmental problems,’ she says. In the end, 14 of the foetuses were born prematurely.
The team’s approach relied on methods developed in the past decade or so to study ‘functional connectivity’ in the adult human brain — essentially using fMRI to determine which brain regions have synchronized activity when the subject is not engaged in any particular task. Synchronized activity between brain regions, the thinking goes shows that those regions are well connected and sharing information.
One feature stood out in the brains of the foetuses that were ultimately born prematurely: A small patch on the left side of the brain, in an area that develops into a language processing centre, had weaker connectivity with other brain regions than it did in foetuses carried to full term. ‘That they can detect this difference in connectivity so early is something interesting,’ says Hao Huang, who studies neonatal brain development at the University of Pennsylvania. ‘Usually with earlier detection you have better chances for intervention.’ Language problems are common in children born prematurely, and Thomason plans to track these children as they develop.
Previous studies have reported altered connectivity in the brains of premature infants, but only after birth, leaving open the possibility that stress, oxygen deprivation, or other injury during delivery is to blame. But Thomason and her colleagues not only found that the impairment starts earlier; they also found a hint of a cause. The mothers who delivered prematurely had more inflammation in their placental tissue, which leads Thomason to suspect that maternal infection or inflammation might play a role.
The fetal brain is a moving target in another sense, too. Its anatomy is in constant flux as it matures, which means researchers need templates and atlases for different developmental time points to be able to make comparisons across subjects. Several research groups around the world are currently developing these resources.
The ability to image the fetal brain at work opens up questions in basic science, too, Huang says. In the course of a pregnancy, the human brain transforms from a simple fluid-filled tube into a complex organ ready to perceive and interact with the outside world. How this process unfolds is largely a mystery, and Huang is eager to probe such questions as how and when the networks found in the mature brain develop and become active for the first time. At last, he says, ‘The techniques are catching up’ to the questions.
(Information and Data Courtesy: Science Magazine)