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Dive into the research topics where Pieter Guldenmund is active.

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Featured researches published by Pieter Guldenmund.


Brain | 2013

Thalamus, Brainstem and Salience Network Connectivity Changes During Propofol-Induced Sedation and Unconsciousness

Pieter Guldenmund; Athena Demertzi; Pierre Boveroux; Mélanie Boly; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Marie-Aurélie Bruno; Olivia Gosseries; Quentin Noirhomme; Jean-François Brichant; Vincent Bonhomme; Steven Laureys; Andrea Soddu

In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we examined the effect of mild propofol sedation and propofol-induced unconsciousness on resting state brain connectivity, using graph analysis based on independent component analysis and a classical seed-based analysis. Contrary to previous propofol research, which mainly emphasized the importance of connectivity in the default mode network (DMN) and external control network (ECN), we focused on the salience network, thalamus, and brainstem. The importance of these brain regions in brain arousal and organization merits a more detailed examination of their connectivity response to propofol. We found that the salience network disintegrated during propofol-induced unconsciousness. The thalamus decreased connectivity with the DMN, ECN, and salience network, while increasing connectivity with sensorimotor and auditory/insular cortices. Brainstem regions disconnected from the DMN with unconsciousness, while the pontine tegmental area increased connectivity with the insulae during mild sedation. These findings illustrate that loss of consciousness is associated with a wide variety of decreases and increases of both cortical and subcortical connectivity. It furthermore stresses the necessity of also examining resting state connectivity in networks representing arousal, not only those associated with awareness.


Archives Italiennes De Biologie | 2012

A default mode of brain function in altered states of consciousness.

Pieter Guldenmund; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Mélanie Boly; Steven Laureys; Andrea Soddu

Using modern brain imaging techniques, new discoveries are being made concerning the spontaneous activity of the brain when it is devoid of attention-demanding tasks. Spatially separated patches of neuronal assemblies have been found to show synchronized oscillatory activity behavior and are said to be functionally connected. One of the most robust of these is the default mode network, which is associated with intrinsic processes like mind wandering and self-projection. Furthermore, activity in this network is anticorrelated with activity in a network that is linked to attention to external stimuli. The integrity of both networks is disturbed in altered states of consciousness, like sleep, general anesthesia and hypnosis. In coma and related disorders of consciousness, encompassing the vegetative state (unresponsive wakefulness syndrome) and minimally conscious state, default mode network integrity correlates with the level of remaining consciousness, offering the possibility of using this information for diagnostic and prognostic purposes. Functional brain imaging is currently being validated as a valuable addition to the standardized behavioral assessments that are already in use.


Critical Care Research and Practice | 2012

Mindsight: Diagnostics in Disorders of Consciousness

Pieter Guldenmund; Johan Stender; Lizette Heine; Steven Laureys

Diagnosis of patients with disorders of consciousness (comprising coma, vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, and minimally conscious state) has long been dependent on unstandardized behavioral tests. The arrival of standardized behavioral tools, and especially the Coma Recovery Scale revised, uncovered a high rate of misdiagnosis. Ancillary techniques, such as brain imaging and electrophysiological examinations, are ever more often being deployed to aid in the search for remaining consciousness. They are used to look for brain activity patterns similar to those found in healthy controls. The development of portable and cheaper devices will make these techniques more widely available.


Brain | 2016

Propofol-induced Frontal Cortex Disconnection: a Study of Resting State Networks, Total Brain Connectivity, and Mean BOLD Signal Oscillation Frequencies.

Pieter Guldenmund; Ithabi S. Gantner; Katherine Baquero; Tushar Das; Athena Demertzi; Pierre Boveroux; Vincent Bonhomme; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Marie-Aurélie Bruno; Olivia Gosseries; Quentin Noirhomme; Murielle Kirsch; Mélanie Boly; Adrian M. Owen; Steven Laureys; Francisco Gómez; Andrea Soddu

Propofol is one of the most commonly used anesthetics in the world, but much remains unknown about the mechanisms by which it induces loss of consciousness. In this resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we examined qualitative and quantitative changes of resting-state networks (RSNs), total brain connectivity, and mean oscillation frequencies of the regional blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal, associated with propofol-induced mild sedation and loss of responsiveness in healthy subjects. We found that detectability of RSNs diminished significantly with loss of responsiveness, and total brain connectivity decreased strongly in the frontal cortex, which was associated with increased mean oscillation frequencies of the BOLD signal. Our results suggest a pivotal role of the frontal cortex in propofol-induced loss of responsiveness.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2017

Sedation of Patients With Disorders of Consciousness During Neuroimaging: Effects on Resting State Functional Brain Connectivity.

Murielle Kirsch; Pieter Guldenmund; Mohamed Ali Bahri; Athina Demertzi; Katherine Andrea Baquero Duarte; Lizette Heine; Vanessa Charland-Verville; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Marie-Aurélie Bruno; Olivia Gosseries; Carol Di Perri; Erik Ziegler; Jean-François Brichant; Andrea Soddu; Vincent Bonhomme; Steven Laureys

BACKGROUND: To reduce head movement during resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging, post-coma patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) are frequently sedated with propofol. However, little is known about the effects of this sedation on the brain connectivity patterns in the damaged brain essential for differential diagnosis. In this study, we aimed to assess these effects. METHODS: Using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging 3T data obtained over several years of scanning patients for diagnostic and research purposes, we employed a seed-based approach to examine resting state connectivity in higher-order (default mode, bilateral external control, and salience) and lower-order (auditory, sensorimotor, and visual) resting state networks and connectivity with the thalamus, in 20 healthy unsedated controls, 8 unsedated patients with DOC, and 8 patients with DOC sedated with propofol. The DOC groups were matched for age at onset, etiology, time spent in DOC, diagnosis, standardized behavioral assessment scores, movement intensities, and pattern of structural brain injury (as assessed with T1-based voxel-based morphometry). RESULTS: DOC were associated with severely impaired resting state network connectivity in all but the visual network. Thalamic connectivity to higher-order network regions was also reduced. Propofol administration to patients was associated with minor further decreases in thalamic and insular connectivity. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that connectivity decreases associated with propofol sedation, involving the thalamus and insula, are relatively small compared with those already caused by DOC-associated structural brain injury. Nonetheless, given the known importance of the thalamus in brain arousal, its disruption could well reflect the diminished movement obtained in these patients. However, more research is needed on this topic to fully address the research question.


Brain Injury | 2016

Structural brain injury in patients with disorders of consciousness: A voxel-based morphometry study

Pieter Guldenmund; Andrea Soddu; Katherine Baquero; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Marie-Aurélie Bruno; Olivia Gosseries; Steven Laureys; Francisco Gómez

Abstract Main objective: Disorders of consciousness (DOC; encompassing coma, vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS) and minimally conscious state minus/plus (MCS–/+)) are associated with structural brain injury. The extent of this damage remains poorly understood and merits a detailed examination using novel analysis techniques. Research design/methods and procedures: This study used voxel-based morphometry (VBM) on structural magnetic resonance imaging scans of 61 patients with DOC to examine grey and white matter injury associated with DOC, time spent in DOC, aetiology and diagnosis. Main outcomes and results: DOC and time spent in DOC were found to be associated with widespread structural brain injury, although the latter did not correlate strongly with injury in the right cerebral hemisphere. Traumatic, as compared to non-traumatic aetiology, was related to more injury in the brainstem, midbrain, thalamus, hypothalamus, basal forebrain, cerebellum, and posterior corpus callosum. Potential structural differences were found between VS/UWS and MCS and between MCS– and MCS+, but need further examination. Conclusions: The findings indicate that both traumatic and non-traumatic DOC are associated with widespread structural brain injury, although differences exist that could lead to aetiology-specific treatment strategies. Furthermore, the high degree of atrophy occurring after initial brain injury prompts the development and use of neuroprotective techniques to potentially increase patients’ chances of recovery.


IX International Seminar on Medical Information Processing and Analysis | 2013

A multiscale method for a robust detection of the default mode network

Katherine Baquero; Francisco Gómez; Christian Cifuentes; Pieter Guldenmund; Athena Demertzi; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Olivia Gosseries; Jean-Flory Tshibanda; Quentin Noirhomme; Steven Laureys; Andrea Soddu; Eduardo Romero

The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a resting state network widely used for the analysis and diagnosis of mental disorders. It is normally detected in fMRI data, but for its detection in data corrupted by motion artefacts or low neuronal activity, the use of a robust analysis method is mandatory. In fMRI it has been shown that the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the detection sensitivity of neuronal regions is increased with di erent smoothing kernels sizes. Here we propose to use a multiscale decomposition based of a linear scale-space representation for the detection of the DMN. Three main points are proposed in this methodology: rst, the use of fMRI data at di erent smoothing scale-spaces, second, detection of independent neuronal components of the DMN at each scale by using standard preprocessing methods and ICA decomposition at scale-level, and nally, a weighted contribution of each scale by the Goodness of Fit measurement. This method was applied to a group of control subjects and was compared with a standard preprocesing baseline. The detection of the DMN was improved at single subject level and at group level. Based on these results, we suggest to use this methodology to enhance the detection of the DMN in data perturbed with artefacts or applied to subjects with low neuronal activity. Furthermore, the multiscale method could be extended for the detection of other resting state neuronal networks.


BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia | 2017

Brain functional connectivity differentiates dexmedetomidine from propofol and natural sleep

Pieter Guldenmund; Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse; Robert D. Sanders; Jamie Sleigh; Marie-Aurélie Bruno; Athena Demertzi; Mohamed Ali Bahri; Océane Jaquet; J. Sanfilippo; Katherine Baquero; Mélanie Boly; Jean-François Brichant; Steven Laureys; Vincent Bonhomme


Archive | 2018

Degree of Centrality within the motor network for Parkinson’s Disease

Katherine Andrea Baquero Duarte; Pieter Guldenmund; Maud Rouillard; Frédérique Depierreux; Evelyne Balteau; Christophe Phillips; Mohamed Ali Bahri; Gaëtan Garraux


Archive | 2017

Mean and variance of Dynamic Functional Connectivity in Parkinson’s Disease

Katherine Andrea Baquero Duarte; Pieter Guldenmund; Maud Rouillard; Frédérique Depierreux; Evelyne Balteau; Christophe Phillips; Mohamed Ali Bahri; Gaëtan Garraux

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Andrea Soddu

University of Western Ontario

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