Larger lesion volume in people with multiple sclerosis is associated with increased transition energies between brain states and decreased entropy of brain activity.

TitleLarger lesion volume in people with multiple sclerosis is associated with increased transition energies between brain states and decreased entropy of brain activity.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsTozlu C, Card S, Jamison K, Gauthier SA, Kuceyeski A
JournalNetw Neurosci
Volume7
Issue2
Pagination539-556
Date Published2023
ISSN2472-1751
Abstract

Quantifying the relationship between the brain's functional activity patterns and its structural backbone is crucial when relating the severity of brain pathology to disability in multiple sclerosis (MS). Network control theory (NCT) characterizes the brain's energetic landscape using the structural connectome and patterns of brain activity over time. We applied NCT to investigate brain-state dynamics and energy landscapes in controls and people with MS (pwMS). We also computed entropy of brain activity and investigated its association with the dynamic landscape's transition energy and lesion volume. Brain states were identified by clustering regional brain activity vectors, and NCT was applied to compute the energy required to transition between these brain states. We found that entropy was negatively correlated with lesion volume and transition energy, and that larger transition energies were associated with pwMS with disability. This work supports the notion that shifts in the pattern of brain activity in pwMS without disability results in decreased transition energies compared to controls, but, as this shift evolves over the disease, transition energies increase beyond controls and disability occurs. Our results provide the first evidence in pwMS that larger lesion volumes result in greater transition energy between brain states and decreased entropy of brain activity.

DOI10.1162/netn_a_00292
Alternate JournalNetw Neurosci
PubMed ID37397885
PubMed Central IDPMC10312270
Related Institute: 
Brain Health Imaging Institute (BHII)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
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