| Literature DB >> 27508396 |
Sabrina B de Freitas1, Alessandra A Marques1, Mário C Bevilaqua1, Marcele Regine de Carvalho1,2, Pedro Ribeiro3, Stephen Palmer4,5, Antonio E Nardi1, Gisele P Dias1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: : Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a prevalent psychiatric condition characterized by multiple symptoms that cause great distress. Uncovering the brain areas involved in MDD is essential for improving therapeutic strategies and predicting response to interventions. This systematic review discusses recent findings regarding cortical alterations in depressed patients during emotional or cognitive tasks, as measured by electroencephalography (EEG).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27508396 PMCID: PMC7111351 DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2015-1834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Psychiatry ISSN: 1516-4446 Impact factor: 2.697
Figure 1EEG is a non-invasive method invented by neuropsychiatrist Hans Berger (1873-1941) that records brain electrical activity. The first EEG studies with humans began in 1924.2 In clinical practice, EEG is useful for functional mapping of cortical areas, both in the healthy brain and in psychiatric contexts, given that it correlates psychological dysfunctions with abnormal patterns of brain functioning. The EEG method comprises a large frequency spectrum with waves of different lengths and amplitudes. From a psychophysiological standpoint, the most important parameter is the clinically relevant frequency range. EEG-identified frequencies can be broken down into the following bands or ranges: alpha, beta, gamma, theta, and delta.2 Alpha (7-14 Hz) is the frequency range which occurs during wakefulness, emerging when the eyes are closed, and in a state of relaxation. The alpha wave is attenuated by eye opening or mental activity.2 Beta (15-30 Hz) is the frequency range linked to motor behavior and is attenuated during active movements. Low-amplitude beta waves are often associated with active, busy, or anxious thinking and active concentration.3 Gamma rhythms (30-100 Hz) emerge when different populations of neurons are connected into a network to perform a certain cognitive or motor function.2 Theta waves (4-7 Hz) are normally seen in young children, but may emerge in older children and adults during drowsiness or arousal. This range is also associated with reports of relaxed, meditative, and creative states.2,4 Finally, the delta frequency range comprises the highest amplitude and the slowest waves (up to 4 Hz), and normally emerges in adults during slow-wave sleep.2 EEG = electroencephalography.
Figure 2Flowchart of the article search process employed in this review.
Cortical alterations in MDD during cognitive or emotional tasks, as measured by EEG
| Reference | Subjects | M/F | Findings | Cognitive/emotional task |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li | 16 with MDD | 6 M/10 F | In the MDD group, abnormally increased EEG gamma coherence was found in both gamma bands, especially in the high gamma band, during emotional processing.Brain networks appeared regular during processing in MDD patients and HC. Conversely, compared with those of HCs, the networks of MDD patients tend to show a shift toward randomization.Negative bias was found in HC from the results of coherence and topological structures. Negative bias was not detected in MDD patients. | Spatial search task for facial expressions (emotional face processing) |
| Stewart | 143 with MDD | 95 M/211 F | MDD individuals showed relatively less left frontal activity than never-depressed individuals when performing approach- and withdrawal-related facial expressions. | DFA task |
| Beeney | 13 with MDD | All F (57) | MDD group showed greater right asymmetry, reflecting withdrawal tendencies in response to rejection. The HC group moved toward balance in terms of cortical alpha. | Cyberball task |
| Deldin & Chiu | 15 with MDD | 12 F/3 M13 F/5 M | Responders showed decreased alpha power even at pre-task baseline, with no additional decrease during either unguided or guided thinking. Depressed responders (who reported greater scores on a range of scales assessing depressogenic symptoms) exhibited a baseline frontal asymmetry of greater right than left activity compared with depressed non-responders. Greater right frontal activity was found in individuals with greater depression severity. | Cognitive restructuring task based on CT techniques for depression |
| Siegle | 14 with MDD | 6 F/8 M | MDD individuals displayed sustained and increased gamma-band EEG throughout the task, particularly in the seconds following negative words. | Lexical emotion identification task |
| Wei | 16 with MDD | 11 F/5 M | Both groups had different WE during a recognition task with emotional faces. | Recognition task with three facial expressions: happy (positive), sad (negative), and neutral |
BPD = borderline personality disorder; CT = cognitive restructuring; DFA = directed facial action; EEG = electroencephalogram; F = female; HC = healthy controls; M = male; MDD = major depressive disorder; WE = wavelet entropy.