Literature DB >> 33255604

Pupil Dilation during Reward Anticipation Is Correlated to Depressive Symptom Load in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder.

Max Schneider1, Immanuel G Elbau1, Teachawidd Nantawisarakul1, Dorothee Pöhlchen1, Tanja Brückl1, Michael Czisch1, Philipp G Saemann1, Michael D Lee2, Elisabeth B Binder1, Victor I Spoormaker1.   

Abstract

Depression is a debilitating disorder with high prevalence and socioeconomic cost, but the brain-physiological processes that are altered during depressive states are not well understood. Here, we build on recent findings in macaques that indicate a direct causal relationship between pupil dilation and anterior cingulate cortex mediated arousal during anticipation of reward. We translated these findings to human subjects with concomitant pupillometry/fMRI in a sample of unmedicated participants diagnosed with major depression and healthy controls. We could show that the upregulation and maintenance of arousal in anticipation of reward was disrupted in patients in a symptom-load dependent manner. We could further show that the failure to maintain reward anticipatory arousal showed state-marker properties, as it tracked the load and impact of depressive symptoms independent of prior diagnosis status. Further, group differences of anticipatory arousal and continuous correlations with symptom load were not traceable only at the level of pupillometric responses, but were mirrored also at the neural level within salience network hubs. The upregulation and maintenance of arousal during reward anticipation is a novel translational and well-traceable process that could prove a promising gateway to a physiologically informed patient stratification and targeted interventions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  arousal; depression; fMRI; pupillometry; reward

Year:  2020        PMID: 33255604      PMCID: PMC7760331          DOI: 10.3390/brainsci10120906

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Sci        ISSN: 2076-3425


  55 in total

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1.  Pupillometry tracks cognitive load and salience network activity in a working memory functional magnetic resonance imaging task.

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  2 in total

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