Altered connectivity patterns of medial and lateral orbitofrontal cortex underlie the severity of bulimic symptoms

IF 5.3 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ijchp.2024.100439
Wei Li , Ximei Chen , Yijun Luo , Mingyue Xiao , Yong Liu , Hong Chen
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Abstract

Objective

Compared to clinical bulimia nervosa, sub-threshold bulimic symptoms are becoming more prevalent in non-clinical or general population, which is repeatedly linked with the connectivity in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), including functionally heterogeneous the medial and lateral OFC (mOFC; lOFC). However, the specific connectivity patterns of the mOFC and lOFC in individuals with severe or mild bulimic symptoms (SB; MB) remain poorly understood.

Methods

We first utilized resting-state functional connectivity (FC) and spectral dynamic causal modeling (spDCM) to investigate abnormal functional and effective connectivity (EC) of OFC subregions in adults with different severity of bulimic. The SB group (n = 21), MB group (n = 114), and healthy controls (HC, n = 91) underwent rs-fMRI scans. A generalized linear model was applied to determine the OFC-seeded whole-brain FC across the three groups. Subsequently, spDCM was used to estimate differences in EC among the three groups based on the FC results.

Results

We observed a shared neural basis for SB and MB groups (i.e., weaker lOFC-superior parietal lobule connectivity), which may support the role of dysfunctional inhibitory control in general bulimic symptomatology. Whereas, SB group displayed greater lOFC-occipital pole connectivity than MB group, suggesting the specificity of the neural correlates of full-threshold/severe bulimia. The directional links from the mOFC to lOFC and amygdala could further explain the aberrant interactions of reward sensitivity with inhibitory control and homeostatic energy in sub-threshold/mild condition.

Conclusion

The current study provides novel evidence that divergent connectivity patterns of the lOFC and mOFC may contribute to different severities of bulimia, which will expands our understanding of the neurobiological substrates underlying bulimia across a spectrum from healthy to unhealthy.

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内侧和外侧眶额皮层连接模式的改变是暴食症严重程度的基础
目的与临床贪食症相比,阈下贪食症症状在非临床人群或普通人群中越来越普遍,这与眶额皮层(OFC)的连通性有关,包括功能异质性的内侧和外侧OFC(mOFC;lOFC)。我们首先利用静息态功能连通性(FC)和频谱动态因果建模(spDCM)研究了不同暴食严重程度的成人的眶额皮质亚区的异常功能和有效连通性(EC)。SB组(21人)、MB组(114人)和健康对照组(91人)接受了rs-fMRI扫描。应用广义线性模型确定了三组的 OFC 种子全脑 FC。结果我们观察到 SB 组和 MB 组有共同的神经基础(即较弱的 lOFC-顶叶上部连接),这可能支持抑制控制功能障碍在一般贪食症状中的作用。而SB组比MB组显示出更强的lOFC-枕极连通性,这表明完全阈值/严重贪食症的神经相关性具有特异性。从mOFC到lOFC和杏仁核的定向联系可以进一步解释阈下/轻度暴食症中奖赏敏感性与抑制控制和能量平衡的异常相互作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.70
自引率
5.70%
发文量
38
审稿时长
33 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology is dedicated to publishing manuscripts with a strong emphasis on both basic and applied research, encompassing experimental, clinical, and theoretical contributions that advance the fields of Clinical and Health Psychology. With a focus on four core domains—clinical psychology and psychotherapy, psychopathology, health psychology, and clinical neurosciences—the IJCHP seeks to provide a comprehensive platform for scholarly discourse and innovation. The journal accepts Original Articles (empirical studies) and Review Articles. Manuscripts submitted to IJCHP should be original and not previously published or under consideration elsewhere. All signing authors must unanimously agree on the submitted version of the manuscript. By submitting their work, authors agree to transfer their copyrights to the Journal for the duration of the editorial process.
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