| Literature DB >> 23408420 |
Lifeng Wang1, Zhengjia Dai, Hongjun Peng, Liwen Tan, Yuqiang Ding, Zhong He, Yan Zhang, Mingrui Xia, Zexuan Li, Weihui Li, Yi Cai, Shaojia Lu, Mei Liao, Li Zhang, Weiwei Wu, Yong He, Lingjiang Li.
Abstract
Many studies have suggested that childhood maltreatment increase risk of adulthood major depressive disorder (MDD) and predict its unfavorable treatment outcome, yet the neural underpinnings associated with childhood maltreatment in MDD remain poorly understood. Here, we seek to investigate the whole-brain functional connectivity patterns in MDD patients with childhood maltreatment. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to explore intrinsic or spontaneous functional connectivity networks of 18 MDD patients with childhood neglect, 20 MDD patients without childhood neglect, and 20 healthy controls. Whole-brain functional networks were constructed by measuring the temporal correlations of every pairs of brain voxels and were further analyzed by using graph-theory approaches. Relative to the healthy control group, the two MDD patient groups showed overlapping reduced functional connectivity strength in bilateral ventral medial prefrontal cortex/ventral anterior cingulate cortex. However, compared with MDD patients without a history of childhood maltreatment, those patients with such a history displayed widespread reduction of functional connectivity strength primarily in brain regions within the prefrontal-limbic-thalamic-cerebellar circuitry, and these reductions significantly correlated with measures of childhood neglect. Together, we showed that the MDD groups with and without childhood neglect exhibited overlapping and segregated functional connectivity patterns in the whole-brain networks, providing empirical evidence for the contribution of early life stress to the pathophysiology of MDD.Entities:
Keywords: MDD; childhood maltreatment; connectome; functional connectivity; resting-state fMRI
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23408420 PMCID: PMC6869506 DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Brain Mapp ISSN: 1065-9471 Impact factor: 5.038