抑制相关皮质低连接性是强迫症的候选易感性标志。

Nursing times Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Epub Date: 2019-10-16 DOI:10.1016/j.bpsc.2019.09.010
Adam Hampshire, Ana Zadel, Stefano Sandrone, Eyal Soreq, Naomi Fineberg, Edward T Bullmore, Trevor W Robbins, Barbara J Sahakian, Samuel R Chamberlain
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:强迫症(OCD)是一种普遍存在的神经精神疾病,其生物学模型与大脑皮层介导的抑制控制通路的破坏有关,而抑制控制通路通常用于调节我们的环境反应和习惯。本研究的目的是评估与抑制相关的皮质连接障碍作为强迫症新的候选易感性标志物的情况:共有 20 名强迫症患者、18 名临床无症状的强迫症患者一级亲属和 20 名对照组参与者参加了一项神经影像学研究,其中包括一项功能磁共振成像停止信号任务。在感兴趣的对比过程中,大脑激活被聚类阈值化,并使用三维分水岭算法将激活图分解为离散的聚类。使用广义心理生理学交互模型研究了这些关键神经节点之间的功能连接:三组患者在年龄、教育程度、性别、智商或行为任务参数方面没有差异。与其他组相比,强迫症患者在任务过程中表现出双侧枕叶皮层过度激活。与对照组参与者相比,强迫症患者及其亲属在停止信号任务中表现出额叶皮层、枕叶中层皮层和小脑区域等神经节点之间的连接性显著降低:这些研究结果表明,在抑制控制过程中,前部和后部皮质区域之间的低连接性是强迫症的一个候选易感标记。如果发现这种易感性标志物具有普遍性,那么它不仅对揭示强迫症的病因过程,而且对揭示更广泛的强迫症相关疾病的病因过程都很有价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inhibition-Related Cortical Hypoconnectivity as a Candidate Vulnerability Marker for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a prevalent neuropsychiatric condition, with biological models implicating disruption of cortically mediated inhibitory control pathways, ordinarily serving to regulate our environmental responses and habits. The aim of this study was to evaluate inhibition-related cortical dysconnectivity as a novel candidate vulnerability marker of OCD.

Methods: In total, 20 patients with OCD, 18 clinically asymptomatic first-degree relatives of patients with OCD, and 20 control participants took part in a neuroimaging study comprising a functional magnetic resonance imaging stop signal task. Brain activations during the contrasts of interest were cluster thresholded, and a three-dimensional watershed algorithm was used to decompose activation maps into discrete clusters. Functional connections between these key neural nodes were examined using a generalized psychophysiological interaction model.

Results: The three groups did not differ in terms of age, education level, gender, IQ, or behavioral task parameters. Patients with OCD exhibited hyperactivation of the bilateral occipital cortex during the task versus the other groups. Compared with control participants, patients with OCD and their relatives exhibited significantly reduced connectivity between neural nodes, including frontal cortical, middle occipital cortical, and cerebellar regions, during the stop signal task.

Conclusions: These findings indicate that hypoconnectivity between anterior and posterior cortical regions during inhibitory control represents a candidate vulnerability marker for OCD. Such vulnerability markers, if found to generalize, may be valuable to shed light on etiological processes contributing not only to OCD but also obsessive-compulsive-related disorders more widely.

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