Perceived stress modulates the activity between the amygdala and the cortex

被引:0
作者
Inês Caetano
Sónia Ferreira
Ana Coelho
Liliana Amorim
Teresa Costa Castanho
Carlos Portugal-Nunes
José Miguel Soares
Nuno Gonçalves
Rui Sousa
Joana Reis
Catarina Lima
Paulo Marques
Pedro Silva Moreira
Ana João Rodrigues
Nadine Correia Santos
Pedro Morgado
Ricardo Magalhães
Maria Picó-Pérez
Joana Cabral
Nuno Sousa
机构
[1] University of Minho,Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS), School of Medicine
[2] ICVS/3B’s,Departamento de Psiquiatria e Saúde Mental
[3] PT Government Associate Laboratory,undefined
[4] Clinical Academic Center—Braga (2CA),undefined
[5] Association P5 Digital Medical Center (ACMP5),undefined
[6] CECAV—Veterinary and Animal Science Research Centre,undefined
[7] Quinta de Prados,undefined
[8] Centro Hospitalar Tondela-Viseu,undefined
来源
Molecular Psychiatry | 2022年 / 27卷
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摘要
The significant link between stress and psychiatric disorders has prompted research on stress’s impact on the brain. Interestingly, previous studies on healthy subjects have demonstrated an association between perceived stress and amygdala volume, although the mechanisms by which perceived stress can affect brain function remain unknown. To better understand what this association entails at a functional level, herein, we explore the association of perceived stress, measured by the PSS10 questionnaire, with disseminated functional connectivity between brain areas. Using resting-state fMRI from 252 healthy subjects spanning a broad age range, we performed both a seed-based amygdala connectivity analysis (static connectivity, with spatial resolution but no temporal definition) and a whole-brain data-driven approach to detect altered patterns of phase interactions between brain areas (dynamic connectivity with spatiotemporal information). Results show that increased perceived stress is directly associated with increased amygdala connectivity with frontal cortical regions, which is driven by a reduced occurrence of an activity pattern where the signals in the amygdala and the hippocampus evolve in opposite directions with respect to the rest of the brain. Overall, these results not only reinforce the pathological effect of in-phase synchronicity between subcortical and cortical brain areas but also demonstrate the protective effect of counterbalanced (i.e., phase-shifted) activity between brain subsystems, which are otherwise missed with correlation-based functional connectivity analysis.
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页码:4939 / 4947
页数:8
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