Rich Club Reorganization in Nurses Before and After the Onset of Occupational Burnout: A Longitudinal MRI Study

Miao Chen, Qian Su, Ziyang Zhao, Tongtong Li, Zhijun Yao*, Weihao Zheng*, Lin Han*, Bin Hu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Studies on potential disruptions in rich club structure in nursing staff with occupational burnout are lacking. Moreover, existing studies on nurses with burnout are limited by their cross-sectional design. Purpose: To investigate rich club reorganization in nursing staff before and after the onset of burnout and the underlying impact of anatomical distance on such reconfiguration. Study Type: Prospective, longitudinal. Population: Thirty-nine hospital nurses ((Formula presented.) years old at baseline, (Formula presented.) years old at a follow-up within 1.5 years, 38 female). Field Strength/Sequence: Magnetization-prepared rapid gradient-echo and gradient-echo echo-planar imaging sequences at 3.0 T. Assessment: The Maslach Burnout Inventory and Symptom Check-List 90 testing were acquired at each MRI scan. Rich club structure was assessed at baseline and follow-up to determine whether longitudinal changes were related to burnout and to changes in connectivities with different anatomical distances (short-, mid-, and long range). Statistical Tests: Chi-square, paired-samples t, two-sample t, Mann–Whitney U tests, network-based statistic, Spearman correlation analysis, and partial least squares regression analysis. Significance level: Bonferroni-corrected (Formula presented.). Results: In nurses who developed burnout: 1) Strengths of rich club, feeder, local, short-, mid-, and long-range connectivities were significantly decreased at follow-up compared with baseline. 2) At follow-up, strengths of above connectivities and that between A5m.R and dlPu.L were significantly correlated with emotional exhaustion (r ranges from −0.57 to −0.73) and anxiety scores (r = −0.56), respectively. 3) Longitudinal change (follow-up minus baseline) in connectivity strength between A5m.R and dlPu.L reflected change in emotional exhaustion score (r = 0.87). Longitudinal changes in strength of connectivities mainly involving parietal lobe were significantly decreased in nurses who developed burnout compared with those who did not. Data Conclusion: In nurses after the onset of burnout, rich club reorganization corresponded to significant reductions in strength of connectivities with different anatomical distances. Level of Evidence: 1. Technical Efficacy: Stage 2.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • longitudinal
  • occupational burnout
  • resting-state fMRI
  • rich club

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Rich Club Reorganization in Nurses Before and After the Onset of Occupational Burnout: A Longitudinal MRI Study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this