| Literature DB >> 29326568 |
Gadi Gilam1,2, Adi Maron-Katz1,3,4, Efrat Kliper1, Tamar Lin1,2, Eyal Fruchter5, Ron Shamir4,6, Talma Hendler1,2,3,6.
Abstract
Uncontrolled anger may lead to aggression and is common in various clinical conditions, including post traumatic stress disorder. Emotion regulation strategies may vary with some more adaptive and efficient than others in reducing angry feelings. However, such feelings tend to linger after anger provocation, extending the challenge of coping with anger beyond provocation. Task-independent resting-state (rs) fMRI may be a particularly useful paradigm to reveal neural processes of spontaneous recovery from a preceding negative emotional experience. We aimed to trace the carryover effects of anger on endogenous neural dynamics by applying a data-driven examination of changes in functional connectivity (FC) during rs-fMRI between before and after an interpersonal anger induction (N = 44 men). Anger was induced based on unfair monetary offers in a previously validated decision-making task. We calculated a common measure of global FC (gFC) which captures the level of FC between each region and all other regions in the brain, and examined which brain regions manifested changes in this measure following anger. We next examined the changes in all functional connections of each individuated brain region with all other brain regions to reveal which connections underlie the differences found in the gFC analysis of the previous step. We subsequently examined the relation of the identified neural modulations in the aftermath of anger with state- and trait- like measures associated with anger, including brain structure, and in a subsample of designated infantry soldiers (N = 21), with levels of traumatic stress symptoms (TSS) measured 1 year later following combat-training. The analysis pipeline revealed an increase in right amygdala gFC in the aftermath of anger and specifically with the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG).We found that the increase in FC between the right amygdala and right IFG following anger was positively associated with smaller right IFG volume, higher trait-anger level and among soldiers with more TSS. Moreover, higher levels of right amygdala gFC at baseline predicted less reported anger during the subsequent anger provocation. The results suggest that increased amygdala-IFG connectivity following anger is associated with maladaptive recovery, and relates to long-term development of stress symptomatology in a subsample of soldiers.Entities:
Keywords: IFG; PTSD; amygdala; anger; fMRI; recovery; rumination; stress
Year: 2017 PMID: 29326568 PMCID: PMC5742339 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Illustration of the global resting-state functional connectivity (rs-FC) analysis pipeline. Inspired by Cole et al. (2010) and Maron-Katz et al. (2016), following parcellation, cross-correlation matrices were calculated for each subject and each resting-state session resulting in an rs-FC matrix. We subsequently Fisher Z transformed the correlation coefficients and computed the global rs-FC (gFC) of the sum of each node (the sum of correlation of node signals with those of all other nodes). We also separated gFC values into positive-only and negative-only values, resulting in three gFC values per subject per session. Finally, a univariate one-sample t-test was conducted on the difference (∆gFC = rest2 − rest1) between each of the three values between rs-sessions applying a multiple comparisons correction.
Figure 2Anger-induced FC modulations. (A) A single parcel located in the right medial Amygdala (rAmy; to the left; MNI coordinates: x = 18, y = −3, z = −18) for which global positive FC (gFC+) significantly increased between rest1 and rest2 (the extent of change is shown on the right). (B) The scatter plot illustrates all 462 amygdala connections per rest1 (x-axis) and rest2 (y-axis) as t-values of the across participants FC calculated in comparison to zero. All dots above the diagonal (311 in number) reflect connections that increased between rs-sessions. All dots beyond the red square have significant t-values (t(43) = ±2.017, p < 0.05), 145 of which had positive FC in both rs-sessions. (C) Examining all pairwise FC changes involving the amygdala parcel revealed a single significant change characterized by an increase in FC with a parcel located in the right Inferior Frontal Gyrus (rIFG; x = 26, y = 23, z = −18). The orange dot in (B) represents the rAmy-rIFG connection. Error bars indicate standard error of mean, *false discovery rate (FDR) q < 0.05, n = 44.
Figure 3The relation between anger-induced FC modulations, state and trait measures of anger and traumatic stress symptoms (TSS). For trait-like measures, a greater increase in FC between right amygdala and right IFG between before and after the anger-induction (rest2-rest1) correlated (A) positively with trait-anger (ρ = 0.469, p = 0.001, FDR q < 0.05; n = 44) and (B) negatively with the adjusted volume size of the same right IFG (ρ = −0.304, p = 0.045, uncorrected; n = 44). To note, these two correlations remain significant even when removing the outlier: ρ =0.443, p = 0.003, FDR q < 0.05 and ρ = −0.313, p = 0.041, uncorrected, respectively. For TSS as measured by the PCL-M questionnaire, (C) greater increase in FC between right amygdala and right IFG between before and after the anger-induction as measured in soldiers at the beginning of combat-training, predicted more TSS 1 year later at the end of combat-training (ρ = 0.459, p = 0.036, uncorrected; n = 21). Finally, for state measures of anger we found that higher gFC+ of the right Amygdala before (rest1) playing an anger-inducing Ultimatum Game predicted (D) lower reported feelings of anger experienced during the game (ρ = −0.332, p = 0.027, uncorrected; n = 44) and (E) higher total-gain accumulated throughout the game (ρ = 0.353, p = 0.019, uncorrected; n = 44).