Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction
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Graph theory reveals dysconnected hubs in 22q11DS and altered nodal efficiency in patients with hallucinations.
[22q11.2 deletion syndrome]
Schizophrenia
is
postulated
to
be
the
prototypical
dysconnection
disorder
,
in
which
hallucinations
are
the
core
symptom
.
Due
to
high
heterogeneity
in
methodology
across
studies
and
the
clinical
phenotype
,
it
remains
unclear
whether
the
structural
brain
dysconnection
is
global
or
focal
and
if
clinical
symptoms
result
from
this
dysconnection
.
In
the
present
work
,
we
attempt
to
clarify
this
issue
by
studying
a
population
considered
as
a
homogeneous
genetic
sub-
type
of
schizophrenia
,
namely
the
22
q
11
.
2
deletion
syndrome
(
22
q
11
.
2
DS
)
.
Cerebral
MRIs
were
acquired
for
46
patients
and
48
age
and
gender
matched
controls
(
aged
6
-
26
,
respectively
mean
age
=
15
.
20
±
4
.
53
and
15
.
28
±
4
.
35
years
old
)
.
Using
the
Connectome
mapper
pipeline
(
connectomics
.
org
)
that
combines
structural
and
diffusion
MRI
,
we
created
a
whole
brain
network
for
each
individual
.
Graph
theory
was
used
to
quantify
the
global
and
local
properties
of
the
brain
network
organization
for
each
participant
.
A
global
degree
loss
of
6
%
was
found
in
patients
'
networks
along
with
an
increased
Characteristic
Path
Length
.
After
identifying
and
comparing
hubs
,
a
significant
loss
of
degree
in
patients
'
hubs
was
found
in
58
%
of
the
hubs
.
Based
on
Allen
's
brain
network
model
for
hallucinations
,
we
explored
the
association
between
local
efficiency
and
symptom
severity
.
Negative
correlations
were
found
in
the
Broca
's
area
(
p
<
0
.
004
)
,
the
Wernicke
area
(
p
<
0
.
023
)
and
a
positive
correlation
was
found
in
the
dorsolateral
prefrontal
cortex
(
DLPFC
)
(
p
<
0
.
014
)
.
In
line
with
the
dysconnection
findings
in
schizophrenia
,
our
results
provide
preliminary
evidence
for
a
targeted
alteration
in
the
brain
network
hubs
'
organization
in
individuals
with
a
genetic
risk
for
schizophrenia
.
The
study
of
specific
disorganization
in
language
,
speech
and
thought
regulation
networks
sharing
similar
network
properties
may
help
to
understand
their
role
in
the
hallucination
mechanism
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"schizophrenia"
symptom
22q11.2 deletion syndrome
achondroplasia
alexander disease
cadasil
child syndrome
congenital toxoplasmosis
kabuki syndrome
kallmann syndrome
krabbe disease
neuralgic amyotrophy
oligodontia
oral submucous fibrosis
zellweger syndrome
This symptom has already been validated