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**No relationship between fornix and cingulum degradation and within-network decreases in functional connectivity in prodromal Alzheimer’s disease** T.M. Gilligan1,2, F. Sibilia1,2, D. Farrell 1,2, D. Lyons3, S.P. Kennelly2,4,5, A.L.W. Bokde 1,2 1. Discipline of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland 2. Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland 3. St Patrick’s University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland 4. Discipline of Medical Gerontology, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland 5. Memory Assessment and Support Service, Department of Age-related healthcare, Tallaght University Hospital, Ireland **Introduction**: The earliest changes in the brain due to Alzheimer’s disease are associated with the neural networks related to memory function. We investigated changes in functional and structural connectivity among regions that support memory function in prodromall Alzheimer’s disease, i.e., during the mild cognitive impairment (MCI) stage. **Methods**: Twenty-three older healthy controls and 25 adults with MCI underwent multimodal MRI scanning. Limbic white matter tracts – the fornix, parahippocampal cingulum, retrosplenial cingulum, subgenual cingulum and uncinate fasciculus – were reconstructed in ExploreDTI using constrained spherical deconvolution-based tractography. Using a network-of-interest approach, resting-state functional connectivity time-series correlations among sub-parcellations of the default mode and limbic networks, the hippocampus and the thalamus were calculated in Conn. **Analysis**: Controlling for age, education, and gender between group linear regressions of five diffusion-weighted measures and of resting state connectivity measures were performed per hemisphere. FDR-corrections were performed within each class of measures. Correlations of within-network Fisher Z-transformed correlation coefficients and the mean diffusivity per tract were performed. Whole-brain graph theory measures of cluster coefficient and average path length were inspecting using the resting state data. **Results & Conclusion**: MCI-related changes in white matter structure were found in the fornix, left parahippocampal cingulum, left retrosplenial cingulum and left subgenual cingulum. Functional connectivity decreases were observed in the MCI group within the DMN-a sub-network, between the hippocampus and sub-areas -a and -c of the DMN, between DMN-c and DMN-a, and, in the right hemisphere between DMN-c and both the thalamus and limbic-a. No relationships between white matter tract ‘integrity’ (mean diffusivity) and within sub-network functional connectivity were found. Graph theory revealed that changes in the MCI group was mostly restricted to diminished between-neighbour connections of the hippocampi and of nodes within DMN-a and DMN-b.
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