海湾战争疾病(GWI)的脑功能和相关的心理健康并发症。

Journal of neurology & neuromedicine Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-07-19
Brian E Engdahl, Lisa M James, Ryan D Miller, Arthur C Leuthold, Scott M Lewis, Adam F Carpenter, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

GWI影响了大量海湾战争退伍军人。这种疾病涉及多个器官系统,其中大脑最为突出。在患有GWI的退伍军人中,神经、认知和情绪相关(NCM)症状经常占主导地位,是慢性健康不良和残疾的根源。此外,这种症状经常与可诊断的心理健康障碍同时发生,主要是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。在这里,我们调查了GWI严重程度增加导致超过阈值的可诊断精神健康障碍(不包括精神病)的可能性。为此,我们在单独的分析中使用了由脑磁图(MEG)确定的症状严重程度评分和静息状态大脑功能连接模式。230名GW时代的退伍军人参与了这项研究。他们完成了诊断性访谈,以确定GWI的存在并评估心理健康状况。这区分了3组:健康对照组(N=41)、患有GWI且无精神疾病的退伍军人(GWI组,N=91)和同时患有GWI和精神健康障碍的退伍军人(GW I+MH,N=98)。对于每位退伍军人,可获得6个GWI领域(疲劳、疼痛、NCM、皮肤、胃肠道、呼吸系统)的症状严重程度评分,以及MEG记录中同步神经相互作用(SNI)分布的9个汇总测量。我们检验了这样一种假设,即在GWI存在的情况下,可诊断的心理健康障碍的出现可能取决于GWI症状的严重程度。为此,我们对GWI人群进行了逻辑回归,其中MH障碍的存在(或不存在)是因变量,6个症状领域中经年龄和性别调整的GWI严重程度是预测因素。结果是参与者是否患有MH障碍的概率。类似地,我们通过执行如上所述的第二次逻辑回归,但以9个SNI测量值作为预测因子,检验了MH障碍的存在可以通过SNI分布模式预测的假设。我们发现,GWI症状的严重程度在各组之间存在显著差异(GWI+MH>GWI>对照组)。GWI组的SNI分布在系统半球模式上也与其他组有显著差异,因此GWI的存在主要涉及左半球,精神健康障碍的存在也涉及右半球。两种逻辑回归都产生了非常显著的结果,表明GWI症状严重程度和SNI分布测量都可以预测GWI中MH障碍的存在。值得注意的是,基于症状和基于SNI的逻辑回归得出的MH存在的预测概率呈正相关,且具有高度统计学意义。综合来看,客观(神经)和主观(症状)指标都表明,GWI与健康对照组不同,其严重程度在一个连续体中变化,最终导致可诊断的MH障碍。基于GWI症状和基于大脑的预测分类之间的正相关性提供了GWI症状严重程度与精神疾病背景下同步神经相互作用之间的关键联系。
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Brain Function in Gulf War Illness (GWI) and Associated Mental Health Comorbidities.

GWI has affected a substantial number of Gulf War (GW) veterans. The disease involves several organ systems among which the brain is most prominent. Neurological, cognitive and mood-related (NCM) symptoms frequently dominate and are at the root of chronic ill-health and disability in veterans suffering from GWI. In addition, such symptoms frequently co-occur with diagnosable mental health disorders, predominantly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Here we investigated the possibility that increased GWI severity leads, above a threshold, to a diagnosable mental health disorder (excluding psychosis). For this purpose, we used, in separate analyses, symptom severity scores and resting-state brain functional connectivity patterns, as determined by magnetoencephalography (MEG). Two-hundred-thirty GW-era veterans participated in this study. They completed diagnostic interviews to establish the presence of GWI and assess mental health status. This distinguished 3 groups: healthy controls (N = 41), veterans with GWI and no mental illness (GWI group, N = 91), and veterans with both GWI and mental health disorder (GWI+MH, N = 98). For each veteran, symptom severity scores in the 6 GWI domains (fatigue, pain, NCM, skin, gastrointestinal, respiratory) were available as well as 9 summary measures of the distribution of Synchronous Neural Interactions (SNI) derived from the MEG recordings. We tested the hypothesis that, in the presence of GWI, the appearance of a diagnosable mental health disorder may depend on GWI symptom severity. For that purpose, we performed a logistic regression on the GWI population, where the presence (or absence) of the MH disorder was the dependent variable and the age- and gender-adjusted GWI severity in the 6-symptom domains were the predictors. The outcome was the probability that a participant will have MH disorder or not. Similarly, we tested the hypothesis that the presence of the MH disorder can be predicted by the SNI distribution patterns by performing a second logistic regression as above but with the 9 SNI measures as predictors. We found GWI symptom severity differed significantly across groups (GWI+MH > GWI > Control). SNI distributions of the GWI group also differed significantly from the other groups in a systematic hemispheric pattern, such that the presence of GWI involved predominantly the left hemisphere, and presence of mental health disorders involved, in addition, the right hemisphere. Both logistic regressions yielded highly significant outcomes, demonstrating that both GWI symptom severity and SNI distribution measures can predict the presence of MH disorder in GWI. Remarkably, the prediction probabilities for MH presence derived from the symptom-based and SNI-based logistic regressions were positively and highly statistically significantly correlated. Taken together, both objective (neural) and subjective (symptoms) indices suggest that GWI is distinct from healthy controls and varies in severity in a continuum that leads, at the higher end, to a diagnosable MH disorder. The positive correlation between the GWI symptom-based and brain-based predicted classifications provides a key link between GWI symptom severity and synchronous neural interactions in the context of mental illness.

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