Literature DB >> 30889471

Pre-scan cortisol is differentially associated with enhanced connectivity to the cognitive control network in young adults with a history of depression.

Amy T Peters1, Lisanne M Jenkins2, Jonathan P Stange3, Katie L Bessette4, Kristy A Skerrett3, Leah R Kling3, Robert C Welsh5, Mohammed R Milad3, Kinh L Phan6, Scott A Langenecker7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We have previously demonstrated that pre-scan salivary cortisol is associated with attentuated frontal-subcortical brain activation during emotion processesing and semantic list-learning paradigms in depressed subjects. Additionally, altered functional connectivity is observed after remission of acute depression symptoms (rMDD). It is unknown whether cortisol also predicts altered functional connectivity during remission.
METHODS: Participants were 47 healthy controls (HC) and 73 rMDD, 18-30 years old who provided salivary cortisol samples before and after undergoing resting-state fMRI. We tested whether salivary cortisol by diagnosis interactions were associated with seed-based resting connectivity of the default mode (DMN) and salience and emotion (SN) networks using whole-brain, cluster-level corrected (p < .01) regression in SPM8.
RESULTS: Pre-scan cortisol predicted decreased (HC) and increased (rMDD) cross-network connectivity to the dorsal anterior cingulate, dorso-medial and lateral- prefrontal cortex, brain stem and cerebellum (all seeds) and precuneus (DMN seeds). By and large, pre/post-scan cortisol change predicted the same pattern of findings. In network analyses, cortisol predominantly predicted enhanced cross-network connectivity to cognitive control network regions in rMDD.
CONCLUSIONS: The association of cortisol with connections of default and salience networks to executive brain networks differs between individuals with and without a history of depression. Further investigation is needed to better understand the role of cortisol and related stress hormones as a potential primary and interactive driver of network coherence in depression.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Connectivity; Cortisol; Depression; Remission; fMRI

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30889471      PMCID: PMC6488402          DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.03.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology        ISSN: 0306-4530            Impact factor:   4.905


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