| Literature DB >> 28367127 |
Golnoush Alamian1, Ana-Sofía Hincapié2, Etienne Combrisson3, Thomas Thiery1, Véronique Martel1, Dmitrii Althukov4, Karim Jerbi5.
Abstract
Despite being the object of a thriving field of clinical research, the investigation of intrinsic brain network alterations in psychiatric illnesses is still in its early days. Because the pathological alterations are predominantly probed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), many questions about the electrophysiological bases of resting-state alterations in psychiatric disorders, particularly among mood disorder patients, remain unanswered. Alongside important research using electroencephalography (EEG), the specific recent contributions and future promise of magnetoencephalography (MEG) in this field are not fully recognized and valued. Here, we provide a critical review of recent findings from MEG resting-state connectivity within major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar disorder (BD). The clinical MEG resting-state results are compared with those previously reported with fMRI and EEG. Taken together, MEG appears to be a promising but still critically underexploited technique to unravel the neurophysiological mechanisms that mediate abnormal (both hyper- and hypo-) connectivity patterns involved in MDD and BD. In particular, a major strength of MEG is its ability to provide source-space estimations of neuromagnetic long-range rhythmic synchronization at various frequencies (i.e., oscillatory coupling). The reviewed literature highlights the relevance of probing local and interregional rhythmic synchronization to explore the pathophysiological underpinnings of each disorder. However, before we can fully take advantage of MEG connectivity analyses in psychiatry, several limitations inherent to MEG connectivity analyses need to be understood and taken into account. Thus, we also discuss current methodological challenges and outline paths for future research. MEG resting-state studies provide an important window onto perturbed spontaneous oscillatory brain networks and hence supply an important complement to fMRI-based resting-state measurements in psychiatric populations.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; connectivity; depression; magnetoencephalography; mental illness; oscillations; psychiatry; resting-state
Year: 2017 PMID: 28367127 PMCID: PMC5355450 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
MEG resting-state connectivity studies in major depressive disorder.
| Reference | Frequency range | Methods | Patients | Controls | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Delta: 2–4 Hz | Frontal alpha asymmetry and voxel-based partial correlation to examine connectivity in prefrontal-thalamic circuit (based on PET) | 30 MDD received rTMS, 6 males | 50 controls | MDD appeared to have impaired prefronto-thalamic functional connections compared to controls. rTMS resolved this pattern in those who responded to treatment after 2 weeks of treatment at 10 Hz in their dorsolateral PFC |
| ( | 14–30 Hz | Correlation | 33 MDD | 19 controls | Patients had reduced correlations between the subgenual ACC and hippocampus in a network with primary nodes in the precentral and middle frontal gyri. Patients showed increased correlations between insulotemporal nodes and amygdala compared to controls |
| ( | 14–30 Hz | Correlation | 13 MDD | 18 controls | Patients displayed enhanced connectivity between insulotemporal areas and amygdala that were reduced to normal levels after ketamine treatment |
| ( | Delta: 2–4 Hz | Magnitude-squared coherence. Seed: dorsolateral PFC | 5 MDD received TMS, 1 non-responder | n/a | Symptom improvement by 10 Hz rTMS increased connectivity between dorsolateral PFC and amygdala, and dorsolateral PFC and pregenual ACC in delta band. rTMS decreased connectivity between dorsolateral PFC and subgenual ACC |
Overview of MEG resting-state studies examining changes in long-range connectivity patterns in subjects with MDD.
MDD, major depressive disorder; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; PFC, prefrontal cortex; ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; MEG, magnetoencephalography.
MEG resting-state connectivity studies in BD.
| Reference | Frequency range | Methods | Patients | Controls | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Delta: 2–4 Hz | Similarity index; using 11 sensors from the frontal lobe | 10 euthymic BD-I | 10 controls: 5 males | Increased synchronization of δ frequency oscillations and decreased synchronization of β frequency oscillations in the frontal lobe in BD compared to controls |
Overview of MEG resting-state studies examining changes in long-range connectivity patterns in subjects with BD.
BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, bipolar disorder type I; MEG, magnetoencephalography.
Figure 1Schematic overview of the key brain regions that show abnormal long-range connectivity patterns in subjects with MDD. Here, we only show areas for which evidence has been confirmed across at least MEG and fMRI modalities. Orange arrows represent altered connection between two brain regions that has been confirmed using both MEG and fMRI resting-state paradigms. Red arrow represents altered resting-state connectivity between two regions that has been confirmed across MEG, EEG, and fMRI. Abbreviations: MEG, magnetoencephalography; EEG, electroencephalography; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; dlPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; sgACC, subgenual anterior cingulate cortex; PCC, posterior cingulate cortex; MDD, major depressive disorder. (Green–blue striped area represents dlPFC shown here from a medial view perspective for convenience.)