鼻内催产素会增加功能性核磁共振成像扫描时的头部运动

Sydney Houlton, Jatin Vaidya, Patrick Breheny, Lane Strathearn
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摘要

摘要 催产素是一种与亲社会行为(如亲子关系、目光接触和性行为)相关的神经肽。鼻内注射催产素已被广泛用于通过功能磁共振成像研究其对大脑的影响。在一项双盲、安慰剂对照交叉研究中,头部运动是一个重要的混杂变量。研究最初招募了 24 名有毒瘾问题的母亲和 22 名健康对照组母亲,以测试鼻内注射催产素是否会增强大脑对自己和未知婴儿脸部图像的功能反应。结果发现,催产素/安慰剂组和成瘾/对照组之间的头部运动存在显著差异。鼻内注射催产素与更频繁地计数头部运动超过 3 毫米的帧向位移有关,与组别状态无关(z=2.89,p=0.004)。对照组(z=2.30,p=0.02)比成瘾组(z=1.77,p=0.08)更能体现出这种效应。与催产素或安慰剂条件无关(z=2.21,p=0.03),成瘾组更有可能显示头部运动增加。在检查所有时间点的平均头部运动而不是大运动次数时,催产素的影响仅限于成瘾组(z=2.58,p=0.01),观察到显著的组间条件交互效应。因此,鼻内注射催产素可能会通过其对头部运动的独立影响对功能磁共振成像扫描结果产生混淆效应。这些发现应在其他临床人群中进行研究和复制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intranasal Oxytocin Increases Head Motion During Functional MRI Scanning
Abstract Oxytocin is a neuropeptide associated with prosocial behaviors, such as parent-child bonding, eye contact, and sexual activity. Intranasally-administered oxytocin has been widely used to study its effects on the brain using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Head motion is a significant confounding variable which was assessed as part of a double blind, placebo-controlled crossover study. Twenty-four mothers with drug addiction problems were initially recruited, along with 22 healthy control mothers, to test whether intranasal oxytocin enhances functional brain responses to images of their own versus unknown infant faces. Significant differences in head motion between oxytocin/placebo conditions and addiction/control groups were discovered. Administration of intranasal oxytocin was associated with more frequent counts of head motion exceeding 3 mm of framewise displacement, independent of group status (z=2.89, p=0.004). This effect was seen more strongly in the control group (z=2.30, p=0.02) than the addiction group (z=1.77, p=0.08). The addiction group was more likely to show increased head motion, independent of oxytocin or placebo condition (z=2.21, p=0.03). When examining the mean head motion across all time points, as opposed to the count of large movements, oxytocin’s effect was limited to the addiction group (z=2.58, p=0.01), with a significant group by condition interaction effect observed. Intranasally-administered oxytocin may therefore have a confounding effect on functional MRI scanning results via its independent effect on head motion. These findings should be examined and replicated in other clinical populations.
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