| Literature DB >> 30346484 |
Charlotte L Rae1,2, Liliana Polyanska1,2,3, Cassandra D Gould van Praag1,2,4, Jim Parkinson1,5, Samira Bouyagoub2, Yoko Nagai2, Anil K Seth1,6, Neil A Harrison1,2,7, Sarah N Garfinkel1,2,7, Hugo D Critchley1,2.
Abstract
Tourette syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disorder, characterized by motor and phonic tics. Tics are typically experienced as avolitional, compulsive, and associated with premonitory urges. They are exacerbated by stress and can be triggered by external stimuli, including social cues like the actions and facial expressions of others. Importantly, emotional social stimuli, with angry facial stimuli potentially the most potent social threat cue, also trigger behavioural reactions in healthy individuals, suggesting that such mechanisms may be particularly sensitive in people with Tourette syndrome. Twenty-one participants with Tourette syndrome and 21 healthy controls underwent functional MRI while viewing faces wearing either neutral or angry expressions to quantify group differences in neural activity associated with processing social information. Simultaneous video recordings of participants during neuroimaging enabled us to model confounding effects of tics on task-related responses to the processing of faces. In both Tourette syndrome and control participants, face stimuli evoked enhanced activation within canonical face perception regions, including the occipital face area and fusiform face area. However, the Tourette syndrome group showed additional responses within the anterior insula to both neutral and angry faces. Functional connectivity during face viewing was then examined in a series of psychophysiological interactions. In participants with Tourette syndrome, the insula showed functional connectivity with a set of cortical regions previously implicated in tic generation: the presupplementary motor area, premotor cortex, primary motor cortex, and the putamen. Furthermore, insula functional connectivity with the globus pallidus and thalamus varied in proportion to tic severity, while supplementary motor area connectivity varied in proportion to premonitory sensations, with insula connectivity to these regions increasing to a greater extent in patients with worse symptom severity. In addition, the occipital face area showed increased functional connectivity in Tourette syndrome participants with posterior cortical regions, including primary somatosensory cortex, and occipital face area connectivity with primary somatosensory and primary motor cortices varied in proportion to tic severity. There were no significant psychophysiological interactions in controls. These findings highlight a potential mechanism in Tourette syndrome through which heightened representation within insular cortex of embodied affective social information may impact the reactivity of subcortical motor pathways, supporting programmed motor actions that are causally implicated in tic generation. Medicinal and psychological therapies that focus on reducing insular hyper-reactivity to social stimuli may have potential benefit for tic reduction in people with Tourette syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30346484 PMCID: PMC6202569 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awy254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501
Demographic details of participants and clinical features of patients
| Number of males/females | 13/8 | 11/10 | 0.756a |
| Age | 33 (10) | 34 (12) | 0.461b |
| Years of education | 15 (2) | 14 (2) | 0.589b |
| OCD, | 10 | 0 | - |
| ADHD. | 6 | 0 | - |
| YGTSS: symptom severity | 27 (8) | - | - |
| YGTSS: impairment | 20 (12) | - | - |
| YGTSS: total (symptom severity and impairment) | 46 (17) | - | - |
| PUTS | 24 (6) | - | - |
| YBOCS | 16 (9) | 6 (6) | <0.001b |
| ASRS | 4 (2) | 1 (1) | <0.001b |
Data are presented as means (SD). Group difference P-values refer to achi-squared or btwo-tailed t-tests. ASRS = Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale; YBOCS = Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale.
Figure 1Face perception task. Neutral and angry faces were presented for 800 ms before participants were asked to indicate whether the face had been male or female. Face enlarged for illustrative purposes.
Figure 2Activity during viewing neutral and angry faces in Tourette syndrome participants and controls. The insula is hyperactive in Tourette syndrome for both facial expressions. (A) F-test of all effects, (B) F-test of all effects thresholded at more liberal threshold of P < 0.001 and minimum cluster size of 10 voxels, additionally showing the amygdala and insula, (C) controls neutral, (D) controls angry, (E) Tourette syndrome neutral, (F) Tourette syndrome angry. All images thresholded at P < 0.05 cluster-wise FDR (cluster-forming threshold P < 0.001) unless specified. (G–K) Contrast estimate effect size plots (pink bar represents 90% confidence interval) for the OFA (G), FFA (H), amygdala (I), IFG (J), and insula (K), respectively, for (left-to-right) controls neutral (CN), controls angry (CA), Tourette syndrome neutral (TS N), Tourette syndrome angry (TS A), plotted at co-ordinates given in G-K. Unthresholded statistic images are available at https://neurovault.org/collections/4167/.
Figure 3Psychophysiological interaction results in Tourette syndrome participants, demonstrating changes in functional connectivity when viewing faces. (A) OFA, (B) insula, (C) OFA, in relation to tic severity (YGTSS), (D) insula, in relation to YGTSS, (E) insula, in relation to premonitory sensations (PUTS). Unthresholded statistic images are available at https://neurovault.org/collections/4167/. PPI = psychophysiological interaction; TS = Tourette syndrome.
Figure 4Regions showing a correlation between tic severity (YGTSS) and premonitory sensations (PUTS) and a psychophysiological interaction with the insula when viewing faces in Tourette syndrome participants. The worse the tic severity and premonitory sensations, the greater the psychophysiological interaction with the insula. Plots show the YGTSS or PUTS correlation with the insula psychophysiological interaction at each region’s peak coordinates in the contrast (Supplementary Table 3). Black circles indicate group mean, grey diamonds indicate individual participants. (A) YGTSS: globus pallidus, (B) YGTSS: thalamus, (C) PUTS: supplementary motor area (SMA).