Isabella Mutschler , Jürgen Hänggi , Manuela Frei , Roselind Lieb , Martin grosse Holforth , Erich Seifritz , Simona Spinelli
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引用次数: 6
摘要
重度抑郁障碍(MDD)是最常见的精神障碍之一。越来越多的证据表明,脑岛在重度抑郁症的病理生理中起着重要作用。关于在重度抑郁症患者中发生的脑岛亚区体积改变,我们知之甚少。方法对未服药的DSM-IV MDD患者(n = 26)和年龄、教育程度和性别匹配的健康对照(HC, n = 26)的t1加权MRI扫描进行体素形态学分析。此外,我们通过应用解剖似然估计技术对14项结构性MRI MDD研究进行了定量meta分析,以确定脑岛皮层MDD的一致性体积减少。结果我们发现,与hcc患者相比,MDD患者左侧中岛和左右尾状核的灰质体积(GMV)显著减少。我们的样本中左侧中岛体积减少与基于坐标的meta分析结果一致。结论中脑岛在重度抑郁症精神病理中的作用。脑岛中部亚区可能与重度抑郁症患者内感受能力的降低有关,内感受能力是处理“身体感觉”信息的能力。此外,尾状核被描述为一个网络的一部分,该网络介导的情绪和动机过程似乎在重度抑郁症中受到影响。
Insular volume reductions in patients with major depressive disorder
Background
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is one of the most common mental disorders. Converging evidence suggests that the insula plays an important role in the pathophysiology of MDD. Little is known regarding in which insula subregion volume alterations occur in patients with MDD.
Methods
We analyzed voxel-based morphometry in T1-weighted MRI scans of unmedicated DSM-IV MDD patients (n = 26) and in age, education, and sex matched healthy controls (HC, n = 26). Furthermore, we performed a quantitative meta-analysis across 14 structural MRI MDD studies by applying the anatomical likelihood estimation technique to identify concordant volume reductions in MDD in the insula cortex.
Results
We found significantly reduced grey matter volumes (GMV) in patients with MDD compared to HCs in the left mid-insula and in the right and left caudate nucleus. The left mid-insular volume reduction in our sample was consistent with the coordinate-based meta-analysis results.
Conclusions
The findings highlight the role of the mid-insula in the psychopathology of MDD. The mid-insula subregion might be associated with reduced interoceptive abilities in patients with MDD that is the ability to process information of “how the body feels”. In addition, the caudate nucleus has been described as being part of a network that mediates emotional and motivational processes which seems to be affected in MDD.
期刊介绍:
Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research publishes original papers and reviews in
biological psychiatry,
brain research,
neurology,
neuropsychiatry,
neuropsychoimmunology,
psychopathology,
psychotherapy.
The journal has a focus on international and interdisciplinary basic research with clinical relevance. Translational research is particularly appreciated. Authors are allowed to submit their manuscript in their native language as supplemental data to the English version.
Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research is related to the oldest German speaking journal in this field, the Centralblatt fur Nervenheilkunde, Psychiatrie und gerichtliche Psychopathologie, founded in 1878. The tradition and idea of previous famous editors (Alois Alzheimer and Kurt Schneider among others) was continued in modernized form with Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research. Centralblatt was a journal of broad scope and relevance, now Neurology, Psychiatry & Brain Research represents a journal with translational and interdisciplinary perspective, focusing on clinically oriented research in psychiatry, neurology and neighboring fields of neurosciences and psychology/psychotherapy with a preference for biologically oriented research including basic research. Preference is given for papers from newly emerging fields, like clinical psychoimmunology/neuroimmunology, and ideas.