Radiotherapy done to just one region of the brain causes cortical thinning. This might affect the thickness of the other regions in the brain.
The thickness of brain cortex in patients with brain tumors was compared by researchers before and after the radiation treatment. It was found that at both the local and global level, significant dose-dependent changes were seen in the structural properties of cortical neural networks. // These alterations and the finding of increased segregation of brain regions essential for thought function may have a role in the delayed cognitive impairment experienced by many patients after brain radiotherapy.
‘Healthy brain tissues are degraded with radiotherapy outside the tumor region leading to post-therapeutic cognitive impairment.’
This new research is reported in Brain Connectivity, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. In the article entitled "Altered Network Topology in Patients with Primary Brain Tumors after Fractionated Radiotherapy," Naeim Bahrami, Carrie McDonald, and coauthors from the University of California San Diego, used MRI imaging to estimate cortical thickness across multiple brain regions.
The results demonstrated that radiotherapy to one region of the brain that led to cortical thinning could affect the thickness of other brain regions that are structurally and functionally connected.
These global network effects included decreased interactivity and integration of cortical subnetworks, and changes in the distribution of major network hubs in the brain, which are critical for cognitive processing.
"It has been an open scientific question as to whether radiation therapy causes atrophy to brain cortex," states Christopher Pawela, PhD, Editor-in-Chief of Brain Connectivity.
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