Regional brain structural alterations in reward and salience networks in asthma

IF 7.6 2区 医学 Q1 IMMUNOLOGY Brain, Behavior, and Immunity Pub Date : 2025-02-05 DOI:10.1016/j.bbi.2025.01.028
Danielle Carrol , William W. Busse , Corrina J. Frye , Danika R. Klaus , Julia C. Bach , Heather Floerke , Barbara B. Bendlin , Henrik Zetterberg , Kaj Blennow , Amanda Heslegrave , Rachel Hoel , Melissa A. Rosenkranz
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Abstract

Introduction

Chronic systemic inflammation is highly prevalent and has deleterious effects on the brain, impacting both function and structure, and manifesting in elevations in psychological symptoms transdiagnostically. Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airway that affects more than 300 million people worldwide and is known to be highly comorbid with psychological and cognitive dysfunction. Though a growing corpus of work has identified functional brain abnormalities associated with asthma, limited research has investigated structural differences which may partially underlie functional changes. Identifying and characterizing asthma-related structural brain changes will shed light on the neurobiology through which asthma impacts mental function and has the potential to inform prophylaxis and treatment.

Methods

We examined differences in regional brain volume, cortical thickness, and surface area, in 128 individuals with asthma compared to 134 non-asthma healthy controls. Five regions of interest were examined a priori, based on their previous implication in inflammation-related functional consequences (dorsal and ventral striatum, pallidum, and insula), or previous evidence of asthma-related structural impact (hippocampus and thalamus). We supplemented our region of interest approach with a voxel-wise whole-brain analysis. Additionally, we examined the association of brain structure with depression symptoms, asthma severity, degree of inflammation, and plasma biomarkers of neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, and Alzheimer’s disease specific pathology.

Results

Compared to non-asthma control participants, those with asthma had smaller nucleus accumbens volumes, thicker orbitofrontal cortices, larger middle frontal cortex surface areas, and greater diencephalon volumes. Those with more severe asthma had smaller nucleus accumbens and dorsal striatal volumes, reduced anterior cingulate cortex surface area, and greater amygdala volume compared to those with mild asthma. In untreated asthma patients, greater depressive symptoms were associated with smaller striatal volume, suggesting a potential CNS-protective effect of medications that reduce airway inflammation in asthma. In addition, a plasma marker of astrogliosis was associated with larger diencephalon, cerebellum, brainstem, and thalamus volumes, but reduced insula thickness and surface area.

Conclusions

Patterns of structural brain changes in participants with asthma encompass key regions of reward and salience networks, which may in part give rise to the functional alterations in these networks characteristic of chronic systemic inflammation.
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哮喘患者奖赏和显著性网络的脑区域结构改变。
慢性全身性炎症非常普遍,对大脑有有害影响,影响功能和结构,并表现为经诊断的心理症状升高。哮喘是一种慢性气道炎症性疾病,影响全世界3亿多人,已知与心理和认知功能障碍高度共病。尽管越来越多的工作已经确定了与哮喘相关的功能性脑异常,但有限的研究已经调查了可能部分导致功能变化的结构差异。识别和描述哮喘相关的大脑结构变化将揭示哮喘影响心理功能的神经生物学,并有可能为预防和治疗提供信息。方法:我们检查了128名哮喘患者与134名非哮喘健康对照者在区域脑容量、皮质厚度和表面积方面的差异。基于它们先前在炎症相关功能后果(背侧和腹侧纹状体、苍白体和岛)中的含义,或先前哮喘相关结构影响(海马和丘脑)的证据,先验地检查了五个感兴趣的区域。我们用体素全脑分析来补充我们感兴趣的区域方法。此外,我们还研究了大脑结构与抑郁症状、哮喘严重程度、炎症程度、神经炎症、神经变性和阿尔茨海默病特异性病理的血浆生物标志物之间的关系。结果:与非哮喘对照组相比,哮喘患者伏隔核体积更小,眶额皮质更厚,中额皮质表面积更大,间脑体积更大。与轻度哮喘患者相比,哮喘更严重的患者伏隔核和背纹状体体积更小,前扣带皮层表面积减少,杏仁核体积更大。在未经治疗的哮喘患者中,更大的抑郁症状与较小的纹状体体积相关,这表明减少哮喘气道炎症的药物可能具有中枢神经系统保护作用。此外,星形胶质增生的血浆标记物与间脑、小脑、脑干和丘脑体积增大有关,但与脑岛厚度和表面积减小有关。结论:哮喘参与者的大脑结构变化模式包括奖励和显著性网络的关键区域,这可能部分导致慢性系统性炎症特征的这些网络的功能改变。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
29.60
自引率
2.00%
发文量
290
审稿时长
28 days
期刊介绍: Established in 1987, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity proudly serves as the official journal of the Psychoneuroimmunology Research Society (PNIRS). This pioneering journal is dedicated to publishing peer-reviewed basic, experimental, and clinical studies that explore the intricate interactions among behavioral, neural, endocrine, and immune systems in both humans and animals. As an international and interdisciplinary platform, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity focuses on original research spanning neuroscience, immunology, integrative physiology, behavioral biology, psychiatry, psychology, and clinical medicine. The journal is inclusive of research conducted at various levels, including molecular, cellular, social, and whole organism perspectives. With a commitment to efficiency, the journal facilitates online submission and review, ensuring timely publication of experimental results. Manuscripts typically undergo peer review and are returned to authors within 30 days of submission. It's worth noting that Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, published eight times a year, does not impose submission fees or page charges, fostering an open and accessible platform for scientific discourse.
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