| Literature DB >> 29934941 |
Albert Wabnegger1, Anne Schienle2.
Abstract
Previous research indicated that the cerebellum is involved in psychopathologies with body-focused repetitive behaviors. The present study investigated whether patients with a diagnosis of skin-picking disorder (SPD) also show altered cerebellar structure and function. Structural as well as functional MRI data from 30 SPD patients and 31 controls were analyzed. The fMRI approach compared cerebellar activity and connectivity between the two groups during scratching and caressing of a small skin area on the arm. Relative to controls, SPD patients were characterized by reduced gray matter volumes in the left cerebellar lobules V and VI. During picking (relative to caressing), SPD patients displayed increased activation of the left crus I, which showed enhanced coupling with the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC). This study provides the first evidence that SPD patients display structural as well as functional abnormalities in specific subregions of the cerebellum related to motor (V) and affective-cognitive functions (VI, crus I). The SPD-related altered cerebellar connectivity with an area implicated in affect control (VLPFC) fits nicely to the model of pathological skin picking as a maladaptive emotion regulation strategy.Entities:
Keywords: Functional MRI; Skin-picking disorder; Structural MRI; gPPI
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 29934941 PMCID: PMC6351678 DOI: 10.1007/s12311-018-0957-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum ISSN: 1473-4222 Impact factor: 3.847
Fig. 1a Reduced gray matter volume (GMV) in lobules V and VI in SPD patients relative to controls. b Regression between patients’ automatic skin picking and GMV in lobule VIII. Automatic skin picking assessed with the Milwaukee Inventory for the Dimensions of Adult Skin Pick (MIDAS)
Fig. 2a Increased crus I activity/connectivity in SPD patients relative to controls during skin picking vs. caressing. b Regression between patients’ focused skin picking and crus I activity. IFG, inferior frontal gyrus; focused skin picking assessed with the Milwaukee Inventory for the Dimensions of Adult Skin Pick (MIDAS)
Results of the post hoc t tests for the ANOVA findings
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| Main effect group | |||||||
| Controls–SPD patients | |||||||
| VIIb | R | 36 | −60 | −59 | 3.71 | .0106 | .98 |
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| Main effect condition | |||||||
| Caress–rest | |||||||
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| Pick–rest | |||||||
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| Caress–pick | |||||||
| VIIIa | L | − 26 | − 46 | − 47 | 3.49 | .0227 | .91 |
| VIIIb | L | − 24 | − 44 | − 47 | 3.31 | .0289 | .86 |
| VIIb | L | − 38 | − 56 | − 53 | 3.44 | .0267 | .90 |
| X | L | − 24 | − 40 | − 45 | 2.61 | .0340 | .68 |
| Interaction: group × condition | |||||||
| (SPD: pick–caress) – (controls: pick–caress) | |||||||
| Crus I | L | − 52 | − 52 | − 31 | 3.50 | .0471 | .92 |
Italicized data are the results of the whole brain analyses; normal, region of interest (ROI) findings; H, hemisphere; x,y,z, MNI coordinates; p(FWE): p value corrected for family-wise error; d, effect size Cohen’s d