Botulinum toxin-induced facial muscle paralysis affects amygdala responses to the perception of emotional expressions: preliminary findings from an A-B-A design.

Biology of mood & anxiety disorders Pub Date : 2014-10-31 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.1186/2045-5380-4-11
M Justin Kim, Maital Neta, F Caroline Davis, Erika J Ruberry, Diana Dinescu, Todd F Heatherton, Mitchell A Stotland, Paul J Whalen
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

Background: It has long been suggested that feedback signals from facial muscles influence emotional experience. The recent surge in use of botulinum toxin (BTX) to induce temporary muscle paralysis offers a unique opportunity to directly test this "facial feedback hypothesis." Previous research shows that the lack of facial muscle feedback due to BTX-induced paralysis influences subjective reports of emotional experience, as well as brain activity associated with the imitation of emotional facial expressions. However, it remains to be seen whether facial muscle paralysis affects brain activity, especially the amygdala, which is known to be responsive to the perception of emotion in others. Further, it is unknown whether these neural changes are permanent or whether they revert to their original state after the effects of BTX have subsided. The present study sought to address these questions by using functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure neural responses to angry and happy facial expressions in the presence or absence of facial paralysis.

Results: Consistent with previous research, amygdala activity was greater in response to angry compared to happy faces before BTX treatment. As predicted, amygdala activity in response to angry faces was attenuated when the corrugator/procerus muscles were paralyzed via BTX injection but then returned to its original state after the effects of BTX subsided. This preliminary study comprises a small sample size and no placebo condition; however, the A-B-A design affords the present sample to serve as its own control.

Conclusions: The current demonstration that amygdala responses to facial expressions were influenced by facial muscle paralysis offers direct neural support for the facial feedback hypothesis. Specifically, the present findings offer preliminary causal evidence that amygdala activity is sensitive to facial feedback during the perception of the facial expressions of others. More broadly, these data confirm the utility of using BTX to address the effect of facial feedback on neural responses associated with the perception, in addition to the experience or expression of emotion.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

肉毒杆菌毒素引起的面肌麻痹影响杏仁核对情绪表达感知的反应:A-B-A设计的初步发现。
背景:长期以来,人们一直认为面部肌肉的反馈信号会影响情绪体验。最近大量使用肉毒杆菌毒素(BTX)来诱导暂时的肌肉麻痹,这为直接测试这种“面部反馈假说”提供了一个独特的机会。先前的研究表明,由于btx引起的瘫痪导致面部肌肉反馈的缺乏会影响情绪体验的主观报告,以及与模仿情绪面部表情相关的大脑活动。然而,面部肌肉麻痹是否会影响大脑活动,尤其是杏仁核,还有待观察,众所周知,杏仁核对他人的情绪感知有反应。此外,尚不清楚这些神经变化是永久性的,还是在BTX的影响消退后恢复到原来的状态。目前的研究试图通过使用功能性磁共振成像来测量在存在或不存在面瘫的情况下对愤怒和快乐面部表情的神经反应来解决这些问题。结果:与先前的研究一致,在BTX治疗前,杏仁核活动对愤怒面孔的反应比对快乐面孔的反应更大。正如预测的那样,当注射BTX麻痹瓦楞肌/前肌时,杏仁核对愤怒面孔的反应减弱,但在BTX的作用消退后,杏仁核又恢复到原来的状态。这项初步研究包括小样本量,没有安慰剂条件;然而,A-B-A设计提供了目前的样本作为自己的控制。结论:目前的研究表明,杏仁核对面部表情的反应受到面肌麻痹的影响,为面部反馈假说提供了直接的神经支持。具体来说,目前的研究结果提供了初步的因果证据,表明在感知他人面部表情时,杏仁核活动对面部反馈很敏感。更广泛地说,这些数据证实了使用BTX来解决面部反馈对与感知相关的神经反应的影响的效用,以及情感的体验或表达。
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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