| Literature DB >> 29089909 |
Chencheng Zhang1, Yilin Chen2,3, Shuaiwei Tian1, Tao Wang1, Yile Xie4, Haiyan Jin5, Guozhen Lin5, Hengfen Gong6, Kristina Zeljic2, Bomin Sun1, Tianming Yang2, Shikun Zhan1.
Abstract
Despite various lines of evidence implicating impaired decision-making ability in individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), neuropsychological investigation has generated inconsistent findings. Although the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) circuitry has been suggested, the involvement of the cortex has not yet been fully demonstrated. Moreover, it is unknown whether surgical intervention on the CSTC circuitry results in a predicted improvement of decision-making ability of OCD. Here we present a study of decision making based on the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) to investigate decision making in a large sample of individuals with treatment-resistant OCD with and without anterior capsulotomy (AC). Task performance was evaluated in healthy subjects, individuals with OCD that had not undergone surgery, and postsurgical OCD patients with AC. The latter group was further divided into a short-term postsurgical group and a long-term postsurgical group. We found that the OCD patients without surgery performed significantly worse than the healthy controls on the IGT. There were no significant differences in decision-making between the presurgical OCD patients and those at the short-term postsurgical follow-up. Decision-making ability of the long-term postsurgical OCD patients was improved to the level comparable to that of healthy controls. All clinical symptoms (OCD, depression, and anxiety) assessed by psychiatric rating scales were significantly alleviated post-surgically, but exhibited no correlation with their IGT task performance. Our findings provide strong evidence that OCD is linked to impairments in decision-making ability; that impaired CSTC circuitry function is directly involved in the manifestation of OCD; and that AC related improvements in cognitive functions are caused by long-term plasticity in the brain circuitry.Entities:
Keywords: Iowa gambling task; anterior capsulotomy; decision-making; obsessive–compulsive disorder
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089909 PMCID: PMC5651033 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Age and education of the four subject groups.
| Healthy Controls | Pre-operative | Post-operative short term | Post-operative long term | Welch ANOVA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ( | Mean ( | Mean ( | Mean ( | |||
| Age (years) | 37.77 (10.83) | 30.71 (7.62) | 29.29 (5.72) | 33.41 (7.86) | 5.35 | 0.0023 |
| Education (years) | 13.32 (4.61) | 13.08 (2.58) | 13.42 (1.98) | 13.34 (2.47) | 0.1453 | 0.9323 |
Summary of the psychiatric rating scale scores for each patient group.
| Pre-operative | Post-operative short term | Post-operative long term | Welch ANOVA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ( | Mean ( | Mean ( | |||
| Duration of OCD in years | 10.66 (7.12) | 8.92 (3.55) | 10.50 (4.85) | 1.43 | 0.25 |
| Y-BOCS | 25.84 (7.10) | 14.54 (1.89) | 9.22 (1.54) | 168.22 | <0.001 |
| HAMA | 15.16 (7.41) | 9.54 (2.25) | 6.09 (1.75) | 46.87 | <0.001 |
| HAMD | 14.37 (6.67) | 7.58 (1.93) | 4.78 (1.52) | 57.78 | <0.001 |
Net scores of each patient group in each testing block.