LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Classify patients with Moyamoya disease according to their cognitive performance might be helpful in clinical and practical with support vector machine based on hypergraph

Photo by cokdewisnu from unsplash

Moyamoya disease (MMD) patients were now classified according to their cerebrovascular manifestations, with cognition and emotion ignored, which attenuated the therapy. The present study tried to classify them based on… Click to show full abstract

Moyamoya disease (MMD) patients were now classified according to their cerebrovascular manifestations, with cognition and emotion ignored, which attenuated the therapy. The present study tried to classify them based on their cognitive and emotional performance and explored the neural basis underlying this classification using resting‐state fMRI (rs‐fMRI). Thirty‐nine MMD patients were recruited, assessed mental function and MRI scanned. We adopted hierarchical analysis of their mental performance for new subtypes. Next, a three‐step analysis, with each step consisting of 10 random cross validation, was conducted for robust brain regions in classifying the three subtypes of patients in a support vector machine (SVM) model with hypergraph of rs‐fMRI. We found three new subtypes including high depression‐high anxiety‐low cognition (HE‐LC, 50%), low depression‐low anxiety‐high cognition (LE‐HC, 14%), and low depression‐low anxiety‐low cognition (LE‐LC, 36%), and no hemorrhagic MMD patients fell into the LE‐HC group. The temporal and the bilateral superior frontal cortex, and so forth were included in all 10 randomized SVM modeling. The classification accuracy of the final three‐way classification model was 67.5% in average of 10 random cross validation. In addition, the S value between the frontal cortex and the angular cortex was positively correlated with the anxiety score and backward digit span (p < .05). Our results might provide a new perspective for MMD classification concerning patients' mental status, guide timely surgery and suggest angular cortex, and so forth should be protected in surgery for cognitive consideration.

Keywords: vector machine; support vector; moyamoya disease; mmd; performance

Journal Title: Human Brain Mapping
Year Published: 2023

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.