Sex-specific amygdala connectivity alterations in medication-naïve major depressive disorder: A static and dynamic analysis.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Chunyu Yang, Yuanyuan Li, Yuting Wang, Hongli Yang, Yanxin Ling, Li Wang, Jing Su, Yongsheng Ao, Yan Cheng, Jiaojian Wang, Lihua Qiu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Major depressive disorder (MDD) represents a leading contributor to the global disease burden, characterized by pronounced sex differences in prevalence and symptom expression. The amygdala, as a critical node within the brain's affective circuitry, has been implicated in MDD pathophysiology. However, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying sex-specific vulnerability and clinical heterogeneity in MDD remain incompletely understood. This study aimed to investigate sex-stratified alterations in amygdala functional connectivity (FC) using both static and dynamic connectivity frameworks in medication-naïve MDD patients.

Methods: We employed seed-based FC analyses anchored in the amygdala to examine static FC (sFC) and dynamic FC (dFC) in 61 age- and sex-matched MDD patients and 61 healthy controls (HCs).

Results: Significant sex-by-diagnosis interactions were identified in amygdala-striatal circuitry connectivity. Female MDD patients exhibited aberrant dFC patterns involving the visual network and sensorimotor network, characterized by heightened dynamic coupling compared to male patients. Conversely, reduced dFC was observed between the right amygdala and right superior cerebellum in female MDD patients relative to male counterparts. Notably, static and dynamic FC demonstrated divergent directional effects within the same sex, suggesting dissociable neurobiological mechanisms across temporal scales.

Limitation: The cross-sectional design and relatively small sample size may limit the generalizability of findings.

Conclusions: These findings elucidate sex-differentiated amygdala connectivity phenotypes in MDD, highlighting sexually dimorphic neurocircuitry mechanisms that may underlie differential disease manifestation. These data advance our understanding of MDD's neurobiological substrates and may inform the development of sex-specific diagnostic criteria and personalized treatment strategies.

性别特异性杏仁核连接改变medication-naïve重度抑郁症:静态和动态分析。
背景:重度抑郁症(MDD)是造成全球疾病负担的主要因素之一,其特点是患病率和症状表达存在明显的性别差异。杏仁核作为大脑情感回路中的一个关键节点,与重度抑郁症的病理生理有关。然而,MDD的性别特异性易感性和临床异质性背后的神经生物学机制仍不完全清楚。本研究旨在通过静态和动态连接框架研究medication-naïve MDD患者杏仁核功能连接(FC)的性别分层变化。方法:我们在61名年龄和性别匹配的MDD患者和61名健康对照(hc)中采用基于杏仁核的FC种子分析来检测静态FC (sFC)和动态FC (dFC)。结果:在杏仁核-纹状体电路连接中发现了显著的性别诊断相互作用。女性MDD患者表现出异常的dFC模式,包括视觉网络和感觉运动网络,与男性患者相比,其特征是动态耦合增强。相反,与男性相比,女性重度抑郁症患者的右杏仁核和右上小脑之间的dFC减少。值得注意的是,静态和动态FC在同一性别中表现出不同的定向效应,表明跨时间尺度可分离的神经生物学机制。局限性:横断面设计和相对较小的样本量可能限制研究结果的普遍性。结论:这些发现阐明了MDD中性别分化的杏仁核连接表型,强调了性别二态的神经回路机制可能是差异疾病表现的基础。这些数据促进了我们对重度抑郁症的神经生物学基础的理解,并可能为性别特异性诊断标准和个性化治疗策略的发展提供信息。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.00
自引率
1.80%
发文量
153
审稿时长
56 days
期刊介绍: Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry is an international and multidisciplinary journal which aims to ensure the rapid publication of authoritative reviews and research papers dealing with experimental and clinical aspects of neuro-psychopharmacology and biological psychiatry. Issues of the journal are regularly devoted wholly in or in part to a topical subject. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry does not publish work on the actions of biological extracts unless the pharmacological active molecular substrate and/or specific receptor binding properties of the extract compounds are elucidated.
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