Abnormal resting-state cerebral-limbic functional connectivity in bipolar depression and unipolar depression

Jun 19, 2019BMC neuroscience

Unusual connections between thinking and emotion areas during rest in bipolar and unipolar depression

AI simplified

Abstract

Both bipolar depression (BD) and unipolar depression (UD) patients exhibit significantly decreased in brain regions compared to healthy controls.

  • BD and UD patients show lower functional connectivity between the default mode network and limbic areas compared to healthy controls.
  • In BD, decreased connectivity is more pronounced in cortical regions, including the middle temporal gyrus and medial superior frontal gyrus.
  • UD is more associated with connectivity alterations in limbic regions like the hippocampus and amygdala.
  • Decreased functional connectivity in both patient groups is negatively correlated with depression severity, as measured by HAMD scores.
  • Distinct patterns of connectivity abnormalities may serve as potential biomarkers to differentiate between BD and UD.

AI simplified

Key numbers

23 of 22 of 24
Patient Cohort Size
Number of bipolar depression, unipolar depression, and healthy control participants.
−0.649
Negative Correlation with HAMD Scores
Correlation between right amygdala and left pallidum connectivity and HAMD scores in UD.
5.035
Decreased Connectivity in BD
t-value indicating decreased connectivity between the middle temporal gyrus and inferior occipital gyrus in BD vs. HC.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research compares patterns in bipolar depression (BD) and unipolar depression (UD) against healthy controls (HC).
  • It aims to identify distinct connectivity patterns that can differentiate BD from UD.
  • The study includes 23 BD patients, 22 UD patients, and 24 HC participants, all assessed using resting-state fMRI.

Essence

  • Bipolar depression and unipolar depression exhibit distinct patterns of abnormal cerebral-limbic . These differences could serve as biomarkers for differentiating between the two types of depression.

Key takeaways

  • Both BD and UD patients showed decreased cerebral-limbic compared to healthy controls, particularly between the default mode network and limbic regions.
  • BD patients exhibited more significant reductions in within cortical regions, while UD patients showed more pronounced alterations in limbic regions.
  • Decreased was negatively correlated with Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD) scores in both patient groups, indicating a link between connectivity patterns and depressive symptoms.

Caveats

  • Age and illness duration were not well balanced among the groups, which may affect the results. Adjustments were made, but subtle influences remain.
  • All patients were receiving medication, potentially impacting the findings. Future studies should verify results in medication-free populations.
  • The relatively small sample size limited the ability to detect significant differences in between patient groups and healthy controls after correction.

Definitions

  • Functional connectivity: The temporal correlation between spatially remote neurophysiological events, often assessed using fMRI.
  • Cerebral-limbic circuit: A network of brain regions involved in emotional processing and regulation, including the limbic system and cortical areas.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free