| Literature DB >> 30081562 |
Giovanni Nolfe1, Mario Cirillo2, Alessandro Iavarone3, Alberto Negro4, Elisabetta Garofalo5, Annisa Cotena6, Massimo Lazazzara7, Gemma Zontini8, Sossio Cirillo9.
Abstract
The relationship between psychosocial stress at work and mental health outcome is well-known. Brain-imaging studies hypothesize morphological brain modifications connected to work-related stress. To our knowledge this is the first study describing the link between work characteristics and brain imaging in a sample of work-related psychiatric patients assessed according to standardized clinical and diagnostic criteria. The aims of the study are: (1) to evaluate hippocampal and whole brain volumes in work-related psychiatric disturbances; (2) to verify the relationship between brain changes and the anxious and/or depressive symptoms; (3) to observe the relationship between the brain changes and the degree of the bullying at workplace. The hippocampus and whole brain volumes of 23 patients with work-related adjustment-disorders were compared with 15 controls by means of MRI. MR images highlight a smaller hippocampal volume in patients compared with controls. Significant reduction in the patients' gray matter was found in three brain areas: right inferior temporal gyrus, left cuneus, left inferior occipital gyrus. The reduction of the hippocampi volumes was related to work distress and, above all, to bullying at workplace. The results confirm that the morphological brain abnormalities could be involved in work-related psychiatric disturbances.Entities:
Keywords: adjustment disorders; bullying at workplace; hippocampus; neuroimaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 30081562 PMCID: PMC6111669 DOI: 10.3390/jcm7080200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Manual segmentation.
| Brain Sienax (Patients) | Brain Sienax (Controls) | Right Hippocampus (Patients) | Right Hippocampus (Controls) | Left Hippocampus (Patients) | Left Hippocampus (Controls) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,487,785.08 ± 70445.2 | 1,441,922.35 ± 75173.7 | 3441.5 ± 3193.9 | 5948.8 ± 3193.0 | 3202.9 ± 2795.9 | 6137.5 ± 3079.9 | |
| 3.582 | 5.731 | 9.052 | ||||
Figure 1The GM volume group difference map shows a significant reduction in the right inferior temporal gyrus (Brodmann area 20) in the patients group compared to controls.
Figure 2The GM volume group difference map shows a significant reduction in the left cuneus (Brodmann area 19) in the patients group compared to controls.
Figure 3The GM volume group difference map shows a significant reduction in the left inferior occipital gyrus (Brodmann area 18) in the patients group compared to controls.