Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Impact of a mindfulness-based intervention on neurobehavioral functioning and its association with large-scale brain networks in preterm young adolescents

Published inPsychiatry and clinical neurosciences, vol. 78, no. 7, p. 416-425
Publication date2024-07
First online date2024-05-17
Abstract

Aim: Adolescents born very preterm (VPT; <32 weeks of gestation) face an elevated risk of executive, behavioral, and socioemotional difficulties. Evidence suggests beneficial effects of mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) on these abilities. This study seeks to investigate the association between the effects of MBI on executive, behavioral, and socioemotional functioning and reliable changes in large-scale brain networks dynamics during rest in VPT young adolescents who completed an 8-week MBI program.

Methods: Neurobehavioral assessments and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging were performed before and after MBI in 32 VPT young adolescents. Neurobehavioral abilities in VPT participants were compared with full-term controls. In the VPT group, dynamic functional connectivity was extracted by using the innovation-driven coactivation patterns framework. The reliable change index was used to quantify change after MBI. A multivariate data-driven approach was used to explore associations between MBI-related changes on neurobehavioral measures and temporal brain dynamics.

Results: Compared with term-born controls, VPT adolescents showed reduced executive and socioemotional functioning before MBI. After MBI, a significant improvement was observed for all measures that were previously reduced in the VPT group. The increase in executive functioning, only, was associated with reliable changes in the duration of activation of large-scale brain networks, including frontolimbic, amygdala-hippocampus, dorsolateral prefrontal, and visual networks.

Conclusion: The improvement in executive functioning after an MBI was associated with reliable changes in large-scale brain network dynamics during rest. These changes encompassed frontolimbic, amygdala-hippocampus, dorsolateral prefrontal, and visual networks that are related to different executive processes including self-regulation, attentional control, and attentional awareness of relevant sensory stimuli.

Keywords
  • Adolescence
  • Dynamic functional connectivity
  • Intervention
  • Mindfulness
  • Preterm
  • Humans
  • Mindfulness / methods
  • Adolescent
  • Male
  • Female
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Executive Function / physiology
  • Nerve Net / diagnostic imaging
  • Nerve Net / physiopathology
  • Nerve Net / physiology
  • Infant, Extremely Premature / physiology
  • Brain / diagnostic imaging
  • Brain / physiology
  • Connectome
Citation (ISO format)
SIFFREDI, Vanessa et al. Impact of a mindfulness-based intervention on neurobehavioral functioning and its association with large-scale brain networks in preterm young adolescents. In: Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences, 2024, vol. 78, n° 7, p. 416–425. doi: 10.1111/pcn.13675
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Secondary files (1)
Identifiers
ISSN of the journal1323-1316
12views
2downloads

Technical informations

Creation02/09/2024 14:41:14
First validation23/09/2024 12:55:20
Update time23/09/2024 12:55:20
Status update23/09/2024 12:55:20
Last indexation05/10/2024 20:17:54
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack