Hepatic phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P MRS) was undertaken in 85 patients with histologically proven cirrhosis of varying etiologies and functional severity. Reference data were acquired from 16 healthy volunteers who had no history or evidence of liver disease or alcohol abuse. In vivo hepatic 31P MR spectra were acquired with pulse angle 45 degrees and repetition times (TR) of 5 and 0.5 seconds. Peak area ratios of phosphomonoesters (PME), inorganic phosphate (Pi), and phosphodiesters (PDE) relative to beta ATP, and of PME relative to PDE were calculated from spectra acquired at TR 5 seconds. Estimates of saturation effects for individual resonances were obtained by dividing the peak height at TR 5 seconds by that at TR 0.5 seconds to yield a T1-related signal height ratio (SHR). When compared with reference values, the patients with liver disease showed a significantly higher PME/ATP (P < .0001), PME/PDE (P < .0001), PME SHR (P < .001), and Pi SHR (P < .02), and a lower PDE/ATP (P < .001) and PDE SHR (P < .001). The magnitude of these changes increased significantly and progressively with increasing functional impairment. In patients with compensated cirrhosis spectral appearances varied with etiology; thus, patients with postviral cirrhosis showed a significantly higher Pi/ATP; those with alcoholic cirrhosis, a significantly lower PDE/ATP; and those with cirrhosis secondary to primary sclerosing cholangitis, a significantly lower Pi/ATP than the healthy volunteers or other etiological groups. However, spectral appearances did not vary with etiology in patients with decompensated disease. In vitro 31P MRS of perchloric extracts of samples of liver tissue obtained from 10 patients with cirrhosis at transplant hepatectomy showed increases in levels of the soluble PME metabolites, phosphorylcholine and phosphorylethanolamine, and reductions in the levels of the soluble PDE metabolites, glycerophosphorylcholine and glycerophosphorylethanolamine. These changes suggest regenerative activity in cirrhotic livers. The increases in soluble phosphomonoesters in the aqueous extracts accounted for the increased PME/ATP ratio seen in the in vivo spectra, and might account for the increase in PME SHR. The reduction in soluble phosphodiesters in the aqueous extracts did not entirely account for the reduction PDE/ATP ratio seen in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
A central goal of neuroscience is to understand how the brain synthesises information from multiple inputs to give rise to a unified conscious experience. This process is widely believed to require integration of information. Here, we combine information theory and network science to address two fundamental questions: how is the human information-processing architecture functionally organised? And how does this organisation support human consciousness? To address these questions, we leverage the mathematical framework of Integrated Information Decomposition to delineate a cognitive architecture wherein specialised modules interact with a “synergistic global workspace,” comprising functionally distinct gateways and broadcasters. Gateway regions gather information from the specialised modules for processing in the synergistic workspace, whose contents are then further integrated to later be made widely available by broadcasters. Through data-driven analysis of resting-state functional MRI, we reveal that gateway regions correspond to the brain’s well-known default mode network, whereas broadcasters of information coincide with the executive control network. Demonstrating that this synergistic workspace supports human consciousness, we further apply Integrated Information Decomposition to BOLD signals to compute integrated information across the brain. By comparing changes due to propofol anaesthesia and severe brain injury, we demonstrate that most changes in integrated information happen within the synergistic workspace. Furthermore, it was found that loss of consciousness corresponds to reduced integrated information between gateway, but not broadcaster, regions of the synergistic workspace. Thus, loss of consciousness may coincide with breakdown of information integration by this synergistic workspace of the human brain. Together, these findings demonstrate that refining our understanding of information-processing in the human brain through Integrated Information Decomposition can provide powerful insights into the human neurocognitive architecture, and its role in supporting consciousness.
The N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist ketamine produces episodic memory deficits. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to characterize the effects of ketamine on frontal and hippocampal responses to memory encoding and retrieval in healthy volunteers using a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, within-subjects comparison of two doses of intravenous ketamine. Dissociation of the effects of ketamine on encoding and retrieval processes was achieved using two study-test cycles: in the first, items were encoded prior to drug infusion and retrieval tested, during scanning, on drug; in the second, encoding was scanned on drug, and retrieval tested once ketamine plasma levels had declined. We additionally determined the interaction of ketamine with the depth of processing that occurred at encoding. A number of effects upon task-dependent activations were seen. Overall, our results suggest that left frontal activation is augmented by ketamine when elaborative semantic processing is required at encoding. In addition, successful encoding on ketamine is supplemented by additional non-verbal processing that is incidental to task demands. The effects of ketamine at retrieval are consistent with impaired access to accompanying contextual features of studied items. Our findings show that, even when overt behaviour is unimpaired, ketamine has an impact upon the recruitment of key regions in episodic memory task performance.
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