Literature DB >> 25651064

Identification of a common neurobiological substrate for mental illness.

Madeleine Goodkind1, Simon B Eickhoff2, Desmond J Oathes1, Ying Jiang1, Andrew Chang1, Laura B Jones-Hagata1, Brissa N Ortega1, Yevgeniya V Zaiko1, Erika L Roach1, Mayuresh S Korgaonkar3, Stuart M Grieve3, Isaac Galatzer-Levy4, Peter T Fox5, Amit Etkin1.   

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Psychiatric diagnoses are currently distinguished based on sets of specific symptoms. However, genetic and clinical analyses find similarities across a wide variety of diagnoses, suggesting that a common neurobiological substrate may exist across mental illness.
OBJECTIVE: To conduct a meta-analysis of structural neuroimaging studies across multiple psychiatric diagnoses, followed by parallel analyses of 3 large-scale healthy participant data sets to help interpret structural findings in the meta-analysis. DATA SOURCES: PubMed was searched to identify voxel-based morphometry studies through July 2012 comparing psychiatric patients to healthy control individuals for the meta-analysis. The 3 parallel healthy participant data sets included resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging, a database of activation foci across thousands of neuroimaging experiments, and a data set with structural imaging and cognitive task performance data. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Studies were included in the meta-analysis if they reported voxel-based morphometry differences between patients with an Axis I diagnosis and control individuals in stereotactic coordinates across the whole brain, did not present predominantly in childhood, and had at least 10 studies contributing to that diagnosis (or across closely related diagnoses). The meta-analysis was conducted on peak voxel coordinates using an activation likelihood estimation approach. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: We tested for areas of common gray matter volume increase or decrease across Axis I diagnoses, as well as areas differing between diagnoses. Follow-up analyses on other healthy participant data sets tested connectivity related to regions arising from the meta-analysis and the relationship of gray matter volume to cognition.
RESULTS: Based on the voxel-based morphometry meta-analysis of 193 studies comprising 15 892 individuals across 6 diverse diagnostic groups (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, addiction, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and anxiety), we found that gray matter loss converged across diagnoses in 3 regions: the dorsal anterior cingulate, right insula, and left insula. By contrast, there were few diagnosis-specific effects, distinguishing only schizophrenia and depression from other diagnoses. In the parallel follow-up analyses of the 3 independent healthy participant data sets, we found that the common gray matter loss regions formed a tightly interconnected network during tasks and at resting and that lower gray matter in this network was associated with poor executive functioning. CONCLUSIONS AND REVELANCE: We identified a concordance across psychiatric diagnoses in terms of integrity of an anterior insula/dorsal anterior cingulate-based network, which may relate to executive function deficits observed across diagnoses. This concordance provides an organizing model that emphasizes the importance of shared neural substrates across psychopathology, despite likely diverse etiologies, which is currently not an explicit component of psychiatric nosology.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25651064      PMCID: PMC4791058          DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.2206

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Psychiatry        ISSN: 2168-622X            Impact factor:   21.596


  85 in total

1.  The unity and diversity of executive functions and their contributions to complex "Frontal Lobe" tasks: a latent variable analysis.

Authors:  A Miyake; N P Friedman; M J Emerson; A H Witzki; A Howerter; T D Wager
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 3.468

2.  The effects of gender on grey matter abnormalities in major psychoses: a comparative voxelwise meta-analysis of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

Authors:  E Bora; A Fornito; M Yücel; C Pantelis
Journal:  Psychol Med       Date:  2011-08-11       Impact factor: 7.723

3.  Voxelwise meta-analysis of gray matter reduction in major depressive disorder.

Authors:  Ming-Ying Du; Qi-Zhu Wu; Qiang Yue; Jun Li; Yi Liao; Wei-Hong Kuang; Xiao-Qi Huang; Raymond C K Chan; Andrea Mechelli; Qi-Yong Gong
Journal:  Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2011-10-07       Impact factor: 5.067

4.  A meta-analysis of instructed fear studies: implications for conscious appraisal of threat.

Authors:  Marie-Luise Mechias; Amit Etkin; Raffael Kalisch
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-09-26       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Regional heterogeneity in limbic maturational changes: evidence from integrating cortical thickness, volumetric and diffusion tensor imaging measures.

Authors:  Stuart M Grieve; Mayuresh S Korgaonkar; C Richard Clark; Leanne M Williams
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-01-09       Impact factor: 6.556

6.  Neuroanatomical maps of psychosis onset: voxel-wise meta-analysis of antipsychotic-naive VBM studies.

Authors:  Paolo Fusar-Poli; Joaquim Radua; Philip McGuire; Stefan Borgwardt
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2011-11-10       Impact factor: 9.306

7.  Minimizing within-experiment and within-group effects in Activation Likelihood Estimation meta-analyses.

Authors:  Peter E Turkeltaub; Simon B Eickhoff; Angela R Laird; Mick Fox; Martin Wiener; Peter Fox
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2011-02-08       Impact factor: 5.038

8.  The structure of psychopathology: toward an expanded quantitative empirical model.

Authors:  Aidan G C Wright; Robert F Krueger; Megan J Hobbs; Kristian E Markon; Nicholas R Eaton; Tim Slade
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2012-10-15

9.  Research diagnostic criteria: rationale and reliability.

Authors:  R L Spitzer; J Endicott; E Robins
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1978-06

10.  The BrainMap strategy for standardization, sharing, and meta-analysis of neuroimaging data.

Authors:  Angela R Laird; Simon B Eickhoff; P Mickle Fox; Angela M Uecker; Kimberly L Ray; Juan J Saenz; D Reese McKay; Danilo Bzdok; Robert W Laird; Jennifer L Robinson; Jessica A Turner; Peter E Turkeltaub; Jack L Lancaster; Peter T Fox
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2011-09-09
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  394 in total

1.  Where Do Epigenetics and Developmental Origins Take the Field of Developmental Psychopathology?

Authors:  Joel T Nigg
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2016-04

2.  Synthetic consciousness: the distributed adaptive control perspective.

Authors:  Paul F M J Verschure
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2016-08-19       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Using Cognitive Neuroscience to Improve Mental Health Treatment: A Comprehensive Review.

Authors:  Jessica A Wojtalik; Shaun M Eack; Matthew J Smith; Matcheri S Keshavan
Journal:  J Soc Social Work Res       Date:  2018-04-27

4.  Identification of Common Thalamocortical Dysconnectivity in Four Major Psychiatric Disorders.

Authors:  Pei-Chi Tu; Ya Mei Bai; Cheng-Ta Li; Mu-Hong Chen; Wei-Chen Lin; Wan-Chen Chang; Tung-Ping Su
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2019-09-11       Impact factor: 9.306

5.  Frontostriatal network dysfunction as a domain-general mechanism underlying phantom perception.

Authors:  Jeffrey Hullfish; Ian Abenes; Hye Bin Yoo; Dirk De Ridder; Sven Vanneste
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 6.  Harnessing networks and machine learning in neuropsychiatric care.

Authors:  Eli J Cornblath; David M Lydon-Staley; Danielle S Bassett
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2019-01-12       Impact factor: 6.627

7.  Machine Learning Analysis of the Relationships Between Gray Matter Volume and Childhood Trauma in a Transdiagnostic Community-Based Sample.

Authors:  Ashley N Clausen; Robin L Aupperle; Hung-Wen Yeh; Darcy Waller; Janelle Payne; Rayus Kuplicki; Elisabeth Akeman; Martin Paulus
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging       Date:  2019-03-13

Review 8.  Practical recommendations to conduct a neuroimaging meta-analysis for neuropsychiatric disorders.

Authors:  Masoud Tahmasian; Amir A Sepehry; Fateme Samea; Tina Khodadadifar; Zahra Soltaninejad; Nooshin Javaheripour; Habibolah Khazaie; Mojtaba Zarei; Simon B Eickhoff; Claudia R Eickhoff
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2019-08-04       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 9.  Obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Authors:  Dan J Stein; Daniel L C Costa; Christine Lochner; Euripedes C Miguel; Y C Janardhan Reddy; Roseli G Shavitt; Odile A van den Heuvel; H Blair Simpson
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2019-08-01       Impact factor: 52.329

10.  Brain grey-matter volume alteration in adult patients with bipolar disorder under different conditions: a voxel-based meta-analysis

Authors:  Xiuli Wang; Qiang Luo; Fangfang Tian; Bochao Cheng; Lihua Qiu; Song Wang; Manxi He; Hongming Wang; Mingjun Duan; Zhiyun Jia
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  2019-03-01       Impact factor: 6.186

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