囤积障碍患者决策的神经机制。

David F Tolin, Michael C Stevens, Anna L Villavicencio, Melissa M Norberg, Vince D Calhoun, Randy O Frost, Gail Steketee, Scott L Rauch, Godfrey D Pearlson
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引用次数: 141

摘要

背景:囤积障碍(HD),以前被认为是强迫症(OCD)的一个亚型,在DSM-5中被提议作为一个独特的诊断实体。目前的HD模型强调的是决策、对财产的依恋和缺乏洞察力等问题,而之前的神经成像研究表明,大脑额叶区域存在异常。目的:探讨明确的原发性HD患者与强迫症患者和健康对照者(hc)相比,HD患者决策障碍的神经机制。设计:从2006年11月9日到2010年8月13日,我们比较了HD患者、OCD患者和hc患者在决定保留或丢弃个人物品和控制物品时的神经活动。环境:私立非营利性医院。参与者:共107名成人(43名HD患者,31名OCD患者,33名hcc患者)。主要结果测量:通过功能性磁共振成像测量神经活动,其中必须做出关于是否保留或丢弃财产的实际实时和有约束力的决定。结果:与强迫症和HC患者相比,HD患者在前扣带皮层和脑岛表现出刺激依赖的异常活动。具体来说,当决定不属于他们的物品时,HD患者在这些大脑区域的活动相对较低。然而,当决定属于他们的物品时,与其他两组相比,这些区域显示出过多的功能性磁共振成像信号。这些神经功能的差异与HD患者的囤积严重程度、优柔寡断和“不太对”感觉的自评显著相关,而不能归因于强迫症或抑郁症状。结论:研究结果表明,HD患者的前扣带皮层和脑岛功能存在双相异常,这与识别刺激的情绪意义、产生适当的情绪反应或在决策过程中调节情感状态的问题有关。
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Neural mechanisms of decision making in hoarding disorder.

Context: Hoarding disorder (HD), previously considered a subtype of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), has been proposed as a unique diagnostic entity in DSM-5. Current models of HD emphasize problems of decision-making, attachment to possessions, and poor insight, whereas previous neuroimaging studies have suggested abnormalities in frontal brain regions.

Objective: To examine the neural mechanisms of impaired decision making in HD in patients with well-defined primary HD compared with patients with OCD and healthy control subjects (HCs).

Design: We compared neural activity among patients with HD, patients with OCD, and HCs during decisions to keep or discard personal possessions and control possessions from November 9, 2006, to August 13, 2010.

Setting: Private, not-for-profit hospital.

Participants: A total of 107 adults (43 with HD, 31 with OCD, and 33 HCs).

Main outcome measures: Neural activity as measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging in which actual real-time and binding decisions had to be made about whether to keep or discard possessions.

Results: Compared with participants with OCD and HC, participants with HD exhibited abnormal activity in the anterior cingulate cortex and insula that was stimulus dependent. Specifically, when deciding about items that did not belong to them, patients with HD showed relatively lower activity in these brain regions. However, when deciding about items that belonged to them, these regions showed excessive functional magnetic resonance imaging signals compared with the other 2 groups. These differences in neural function correlated significantly with hoarding severity and self-ratings of indecisiveness and "not just right" feelings among patients with HD and were unattributable to OCD or depressive symptoms.

Conclusions: Findings suggest a biphasic abnormality in anterior cingulate cortex and insula function in patients with HD related to problems in identifying the emotional significance of a stimulus, generating appropriate emotional response, or regulating affective state during decision making.

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Archives of general psychiatry
Archives of general psychiatry 医学-精神病学
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