Dorsal Striatal Functional Connectivity and Repetitive Behavior Dimensions in Children and Youths With Neurodevelopmental Disorders

IF 5.7 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Eun Jung Choi , Marlee M. Vandewouw , Margot J. Taylor , Ryan A. Stevenson , Paul D. Arnold , Jessica Brian , Jennifer Crosbie , Elizabeth Kelley , Xudong Liu , Jessica Jones , Meng-Chuan Lai , Russell J. Schachar , Jason P. Lerch , Evdokia Anagnostou
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Impairing repetitive behaviors are one of the core diagnostic symptoms in autism spectrum disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder, but they also manifest in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Although the dorsal striatal circuit has been implicated in repetitive behaviors, extensive heterogeneity in and cross-diagnostic manifestations of these behaviors have suggested phenotypic and likely neurobiological heterogeneity across neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs).

Methods

Intrinsic dorsal striatal functional connectivity was examined in 3 NDDs (autism spectrum disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) and typically developing control participants in a large single-cohort sample (N = 412). To learn how diagnostic labels and overlapping behaviors manifest in dorsal striatal functional connectivity measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging, the main and interaction effects of diagnosis and behavior were examined in 8 models (2 seed functional connectivity [caudate and putamen] × 4 sub-behavioral domains [sameness/ritualistic, self-injury, stereotypy, and compulsions]).

Results

The obsessive-compulsive disorder group demonstrated distinctive patterns in visual and visuomotor coordination regions compared with the other diagnostic groups. Lower-order repetitive behaviors (self-injury and stereotypy) manifesting across all participants were implicated in regions involved in motor and cognitive control, although the findings did not survive effects of multiple comparisons, suggesting heterogeneity in these behavioral domains. An interaction between self-injurious behavior and an attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder diagnosis were observed on caudate-cerebellum functional connectivity.

Conclusions

These findings confirmed high heterogeneity and overlapping behavioral manifestations in NDDs and their complex underlying neural mechanisms. A call for diagnosis-free symptom measures that can capture not only observable symptoms and severity across NDDs but also the underlying functions and motivations of such behaviors across diagnoses is needed.

儿童和青少年神经发育障碍的背纹状体功能连通性和重复行为维度。
背景:重复行为障碍是自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)和强迫症(OCD)的核心诊断症状之一,但也表现在注意缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)中。尽管背纹状体回路与重复行为有关,但这些行为的广泛异质性和交叉诊断表现表明,神经发育障碍(ndd)的表型和可能的神经生物学异质性。方法:在一个大型单队列样本(N=412)中,研究了三种ndd (ASD、OCD和ADHD)和典型发展对照组(TD)的内在背纹状体功能连通性。为了了解诊断标签和重叠行为如何在fMRI测量的背纹状体功能连接中表现出来,我们在8个模型(2个种子功能连接[尾状核和壳核]x 4个亚行为域[同一性/仪式性,自残,刻板印象,强迫行为])中检查了诊断和行为的主要和相互作用效应。结果:与其他诊断组相比,强迫症组在视觉和视觉运动协调区域表现出独特的模式。所有参与者的低阶重复行为(自残和刻板印象)都与运动和认知控制相关的区域有关,尽管这些发现没有经过多次比较,表明这些行为领域存在异质性。在尾状-小脑功能连接上观察到自伤行为与ADHD诊断之间的相互作用。结论:这些发现证实了ndd的高度异质性和重叠行为表现及其复杂的潜在神经机制。需要呼吁采取无诊断症状措施,不仅可以捕捉ndd的可观察症状和严重程度,而且还可以捕捉这些行为在各种诊断中的潜在功能和动机。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.40
自引率
1.70%
发文量
247
审稿时长
30 days
期刊介绍: Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging is an official journal of the Society for Biological Psychiatry, whose purpose is to promote excellence in scientific research and education in fields that investigate the nature, causes, mechanisms, and treatments of disorders of thought, emotion, or behavior. In accord with this mission, this peer-reviewed, rapid-publication, international journal focuses on studies using the tools and constructs of cognitive neuroscience, including the full range of non-invasive neuroimaging and human extra- and intracranial physiological recording methodologies. It publishes both basic and clinical studies, including those that incorporate genetic data, pharmacological challenges, and computational modeling approaches. The journal publishes novel results of original research which represent an important new lead or significant impact on the field. Reviews and commentaries that focus on topics of current research and interest are also encouraged.
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