| Literature DB >> 25538633 |
Benny Liberg1, Paul Klauser2, Ian H Harding3, Mats Adler4, Christoffer Rahm5, Johan Lundberg4, Thomas Masterman4, Caroline Wachtler6, Tomas Jonsson7, Maria Kristoffersen-Wiberg8, Christos Pantelis9, Björn Wahlund10.
Abstract
Psychomotor disturbances are a classic feature of major depressive disorders. These can manifest as lack of facial expressions and decreased speech production, reduced body posture and mobility, and slowed voluntary movement. The neural correlates of psychomotor disturbances in depression are poorly understood but it has been suggested that outputs from the cingulate motor area (CMA) to striatal motor regions, including the putamen, could be involved. We used functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging to conduct a region-of-interest analysis to test the hypotheses that neural activation patterns related to motor production and gray matter volumes in the CMA would be different between depressed subjects displaying psychomotor disturbances (n = 13) and matched healthy controls (n = 13). In addition, we conducted a psychophysiological interaction analysis to assess the functional coupling related to self-paced finger-tapping between the caudal CMA and the posterior putamen in patients compared to controls. We found a cluster of increased neural activation, adjacent to a cluster of decreased gray matter volume in the caudal CMA in patients compared to controls. The functional coupling between the left caudal CMA and the left putamen during finger-tapping task performance was additionally decreased in patients compared to controls. In addition, the strength of the functional coupling between the left caudal CMA and the left putamen was negatively correlated with the severity of psychomotor disturbances in the patient group. In conclusion, we found converging evidence for involvement of the caudal CMA and putamen in the generation of psychomotor disturbances in depression.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; cingulate cortex; cingulate motor area; major depression; psychomotor disturbances; putamen; striatum
Year: 2014 PMID: 25538633 PMCID: PMC4255491 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2014.00176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Sample characteristics.
| Variable | Controls | Patients |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | 6 F, 7 M; | 9 F, 4 M; |
| Age (years) | 39 (29–67) | 44 (24–62) |
| Bipolar depression (type I, type II) | ||
| Unipolar depression (recurrent, first episode) | ||
| MADRS total score | 28.9 (11–48) | |
| CORE total score | 17.7 (10–36) | |
| CORE retardation items score | 9.1 (3–15) | |
| AS-18 retardation factor score | 8.2 (0–12) | |
| AS-18 depression factor score | 23.2 (1–36) | |
| AS-18 mania factor score | 4.9 (0–13) | |
| AS-18 total score | 36.2 (2–58) | |
| Lithium | ||
| Typical neuroleptics (FGA) | ||
| Atypical neuroleptics (SGA) | ||
| Anticonvulsants | ||
| Antidepressant (TCA) | ||
| Antidepressant (SSRI) | ||
| Antidepressant (SNRI) | ||
| MAO-I | ||
| Thyroxine | ||
| Electroconvulsive treatment |
If not otherwise specified, values represent the mean and the range is given into brackets.
M/F, male/female; FGA, first-generation antipsychotics; SGA, second-generation antipsychotics; TCA, tricyclic antidepressants; SSRI, serotonin reuptake inhibitors; SNRI, serotonin-noradrenalin reuptake inhibitors; MAO-I, monoamine-oxidase inhibitors.
Figure 3The image shows the binarized region of interest masks defining the left caudal cingulate motor area and the left putamen regions connected to caudal motor regions in the frontal lobe.
Figure 1The image shows the structural and functional imaging findings in the left caudal cingulate motor area (CMA) and putamen regions connected to caudal motor regions in the frontal lobe. The first row shows the contrast parameter estimates reflecting how patients activate the caudal cingulate motor regions more than healthy controls (Z > 2.3, p = 0.05, corrected) during self-paced finger-tapping. The second row shows decreased gray matter volume in the left CMA of patients (T > 2.5, p = 0.05, corrected). The third row shows the decreased functional coupling of the left CMA and left posterior putamen regions connected to caudal motor regions in the frontal lobe during self-paced finger-tapping (p = 0.02, corrected). Metrics (mean) from clusters of between-group differences in the left caudal CMA and posterior putamen were retrieved using masks comprising 356 voxels/2848 mm3 from the functional magnetic resonance imaging analysis, 941 voxels/3176 mm3 from the voxel-based morphometry analysis, and 31 voxels/248 mm3 from the psychophysiological interaction analysis.
Functional activation statistics during self-paced finger-tapping (patient > controls).
| Cluster | MNI co-ordinates | Anatomical label | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.85 | 1 | 2 | −14 | 52 | 38% precentral gyrus, 36% SMA |
| 3.66 | −2 | −14 | 50 | 38% SMA, 34% precentral gyrus | |
| 3.01 | −6 | −10 | 38 | 32% cingulate gyrus, anterior division (CMA) | |
| 2.75 | 4 | −2 | 52 | 73% SMA | |
| 2.53 | 8 | −2 | 48 | 49% SMA | |
Figure 2The image shows the localization of structural and functional imaging findings in the left caudal cingulate motor. Left is left in the image. The red cluster represents increased functional activation in patients compared to controls (Z > 2.3, p = 0.05, corrected). The blue cluster represents gray matter volume decreases in patients compared to controls (T > 2.5, p = 0.05, corrected). The purple voxels represent the overlap between function and structural findings.
Non-parametric correlations between neuroimaging modalities and clinical ratings.
| Variables | Size | #Voxels (mm3) | Rho | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional activation – CORE (patients) | 356 (2848) | 0.28 | 0.35 | |
| Functional coupling – CORE (patients) | 31 (248) | −0.57 | 0.04 | |
| Gray matter volume – CORE (patients) | 941 (3176) | −0.11 | 0.71 | |
| Gray matter volume – Functional activation | 941 (3176)/356 (2848) | −0.57 | 0.002 | |
| Gray matter volume – Functional coupling | 941 (3176)/31 (248) | 0.52 | 0.006 |