Literature DB >> 11983183

Can't shake that feeling: event-related fMRI assessment of sustained amygdala activity in response to emotional information in depressed individuals.

Greg J Siegle1, Stuart R Steinhauer, Michael E Thase, V Andrew Stenger, Cameron S Carter.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous research suggests that depressed individuals engage in prolonged elaborative processing of emotional information. A computational neural network model of emotional information processing suggests this process involves sustained amygdala activity in response to processing negative features of information. This study examined whether brain activity in response to emotional stimuli was sustained in depressed individuals, even following subsequent distracting stimuli.
METHODS: Seven depressed and 10 never-depressed individuals were studied using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging during alternating 15-sec emotional processing (valence identification) and non-emotional processing (Sternberg memory) trials. Amygdala regions were traced on high-resolution structural scans and co-registered to the functional data. The time course of activity in these areas during emotional and non-emotional processing trials was examined.
RESULTS: During emotional processing trials, never-depressed individuals displayed amygdalar responses to all stimuli, which decayed within 10 sec. In contrast, depressed individuals displayed sustained amygdala responses to negative words that lasted throughout the following non-emotional processing trials (25 sec later). The difference in sustained amygdala activity to negative and positive words was moderately related to self-reported rumination.
CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that depression is associated with sustained activity in brain areas responsible for coding emotional features.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11983183     DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3223(02)01314-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0006-3223            Impact factor:   13.382


  300 in total

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8.  Altered emotional interference processing in affective and cognitive-control brain circuitry in major depression.

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9.  Resilience and amygdala function in older healthy and depressed adults.

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10.  Cognitive behavioral therapy for depression changes medial prefrontal and ventral anterior cingulate cortex activity associated with self-referential processing.

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