The relationship of impulsivity and cortical thickness in depressed and non-depressed adolescents

被引:0
作者
Yuli Fradkin
Sabin Khadka
Katie L. Bessette
Michael C. Stevens
机构
[1] Rutgers University Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,Department of Psychiatry
[2] Hartford Hospital / The Institute of Living,Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center
[3] Yale University School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry
来源
Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2017年 / 11卷
关键词
Impulsivity; MRI; Depression; Cortical thickness;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is recognized to be heterogeneous in terms of brain structure abnormality findings across studies, which might reflect previously unstudied traits that confer variability to neuroimaging measurements. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationships between different types of trait impulsivity and MDD diagnosis on adolescent brain structure. We predicted that adolescents with depression who were high on trait impulsivity would have more abnormal cortical structure than depressed patients or non-MDD who were low on impulsivity. We recruited 58 subjects, including 29 adolescents (ages 12–19) with a primary DSM-IV diagnosis of MDD and a history of suicide attempt and 29 demographically-matched healthy control participants. Our GLM-based analyses sought to describe differences in the linear relationships between cortical thickness and impulsivity trait levels. As hypothesized, we found significant moderation effects in rostral middle frontal gyrus and right paracentral lobule cortical thickness for different subscales of the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale. However, although these brain-behavior relationships differed between diagnostic study groups, they were not simple additive effects as we had predicted. For the middle frontal gyrus, non-MDD participants showed a strong positive association between cortical thickness and BIS-11 Motor scores, while MDD-diagnosed participants showed a negative association. For Non-Planning Impulsiveness, paracentral lobule cortical thickness was observed with greater impulsivity in MDD, but no association was found for controls. In conclusion, the findings confirm that dimensions of impulsivity have discrete neural correlates, and show that relationships between impulsivity and brain structure are expressed differently in adolescents with MDD compared to non-MDD.
引用
收藏
页码:1515 / 1525
页数:10
相关论文
共 372 条
  • [1] Abe O(2010)Voxel-based analyses of gray/white matter volume and diffusion tensor data in major depression Psychiatry Research 181 64-70
  • [2] Yamasue H(2013)Imaging structural co-variance between human brain regions Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 14 322-336
  • [3] Kasai K(2014)Inhibition and the right inferior frontal cortex: one decade on Trends in Cognitive Sciences 18 177-185
  • [4] Yamada H(2013)Inhibition and impulsivity: behavioral and neural basis of response control Progress in Neurobiology 108 44-79
  • [5] Aoki S(1988)Psychometric properties of the Beck Depression Inventory: twenty-five years of evaluation Clinical Psychology Review 8 77-100
  • [6] Inoue H(2013)Risk factors for fatal and nonfatal repetition of suicide attempts: a literature review Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment 9 1725-1736
  • [7] Alexander-Bloch A(2014)Medial prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortical thickness predicts shared individual differences in self-generated thought and temporal discounting NeuroImage 90 290-297
  • [8] Giedd JN(2012)Meta-analysis of volumetric abnormalities in cortico-striatal-pallidal-thalamic circuits in major depressive disorder Psychological Medicine 42 671-681
  • [9] Bullmore E(1992)State and trait differences in depressive self-perceptions Behaviour Research and Therapy 30 555-557
  • [10] Aron AR(2006)Personality traits as correlates of suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and suicide completions: a systematic review Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 113 180-206