Neural response to monetary incentives in acquired adolescent depression after mild traumatic brain injury: Stage 2 Registered Report.

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Brain communications Pub Date : 2024-09-04 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcae250
Jeremy Hogeveen, Ethan M Campbell, Teagan S Mullins, Cidney R Robertson-Benta, Davin K Quinn, Andrew R Mayer, James F Cavanagh
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Abstract

Depression is a common consequence of traumatic brain injury. Separately, spontaneous depression-arising without brain injury-has been linked to abnormal responses in motivational neural circuitry to the anticipation or receipt of rewards. It is unknown if post-injury and spontaneously occurring depression share similar phenotypic profiles. This issue is compounded by the fact that nearly all examinations of these psychiatric sequelae are post hoc: there are rarely any prospective assessments of mood and neural functioning before and after a brain injury. In this Stage 2 Registered Report, we used the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Consortium dataset to examine if a disruption in functional neural responses to rewards is present in patients with depression after a mild traumatic brain injury. Notably, this study provides an unparalleled opportunity to examine the trajectory of neuropsychiatric symptoms longitudinally within-subjects. This allowed us to isolate mild traumatic brain injury-specific variance independent from pre-existing functioning. Here, we focus on a case-control comparison between 43 youth who experienced a mild traumatic brain injury between MRI visits, and 43 well-matched controls. Contrary to pre-registered predictions (https://osf.io/h5uba/), there was no statistically credible increase in depression in mild traumatic brain injury cases relative to controls. Mild traumatic brain injury was associated with subtle changes in motivational neural circuit recruitment during the anticipation of incentives on the Monetary Incentive Delay paradigm. Specifically, changes in neural recruitment appeared to reflect a failure to deactivate 'task-negative' brain regions (ventromedial prefrontal cortex), alongside blunted recruitment of 'task-positive' regions (anterior cingulate, anterior insula and caudate), during the anticipation of reward and loss in adolescents following mild brain injuries. Critically, these changes in brain activity were not correlated with depressive symptoms at either visit or depression change scores before and after the brain injury. Increased time since injury was associated with a recovery of cognitive functioning-driven primarily by processing speed differences-but depression did not scale with time since injury. These cognitive changes were also uncorrelated with neural changes after mild traumatic brain injury. This report provides evidence that acquired depression may not be observed as commonly after a mild traumatic brain injury in late childhood and early adolescence, relative to findings in adult cases. Several reasons for these differing findings are considered, including sampling enrichment in retrospective cohort studies, under-reporting of depressive symptoms in parent-report data, and neuroprotective factors in childhood and adolescence.

轻度脑外伤后获得性青少年抑郁症患者对金钱激励的神经反应:第二阶段注册报告。
抑郁症是脑外伤的常见后果。另外,自发性抑郁症--在没有脑损伤的情况下出现--与动机神经回路对预期或接受奖励的异常反应有关。受伤后抑郁和自发抑郁是否具有相似的表型特征,目前尚不得而知。此外,几乎所有对这些精神疾病后遗症的研究都是事后研究:很少有对脑损伤前后的情绪和神经功能进行前瞻性评估,这使得问题变得更加复杂。在这份第二阶段注册报告中,我们利用青少年大脑认知发展联合会的数据集来研究轻度脑外伤后抑郁症患者对奖励的功能性神经反应是否存在紊乱。值得注意的是,这项研究提供了一个无与伦比的机会,在受试者内部纵向研究神经精神症状的轨迹。这使我们能够将轻度脑外伤特异性变异与原有功能独立开来。在这里,我们将重点放在 43 名在两次核磁共振成像检查之间经历过轻微脑外伤的青少年与 43 名匹配良好的对照组之间的病例对照比较上。与登记前的预测相反(https://osf.io/h5uba/),轻度脑外伤病例的抑郁程度与对照组相比并没有统计学上可信的增加。在货币激励延迟范式中,轻度脑外伤与激励神经回路在预期激励时的招募发生了微妙变化有关。具体来说,神经招募的变化似乎反映了在轻度脑损伤后的青少年对奖励和损失的预期过程中,"任务负性 "脑区(腹外侧前额叶皮层)未能失活,同时 "任务正性 "脑区(前扣带回、前岛叶和尾状核)的招募减弱。重要的是,大脑活动的这些变化与任何一次就诊时的抑郁症状或脑损伤前后的抑郁变化评分均无关联。受伤后时间的延长与认知功能的恢复有关,这主要是由处理速度差异驱动的,但抑郁并不随着受伤后时间的延长而增加。这些认知变化与轻度脑外伤后的神经变化也不相关。本报告提供的证据表明,与成人病例的研究结果相比,儿童晚期和青少年早期轻度脑外伤后获得性抑郁症可能并不常见。研究考虑了造成这些不同发现的几个原因,包括回顾性队列研究中的丰富取样、家长报告数据中抑郁症状的报告不足以及儿童和青少年时期的神经保护因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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