Author/Authors :
Veena Kumari، نويسنده , , Martina T. Mitterschiffthaler، نويسنده , , John D. Teasdale، نويسنده , , Gin S. Malhi، نويسنده , , Richard G. Brown، نويسنده , , Vincent Giampietro، نويسنده , , Michael J. Brammer، نويسنده , , Lucia Poon، نويسنده , , Andrew Simmons، نويسنده , , Steven C. R. Williams، نويسنده , , Stuart A. Checkley، نويسنده , , Tonmoy Sharma، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background:
Dysfunctions in brain regions known to be involved in affect and mood states are thought to be implicated in depression and may have a role in determining the type and symptoms of this illness.
Methods:
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to elucidate neural correlates of cognitive generation of affect, using a previously published paradigm of evoking affect with picture-caption pairs, in patients with unipolar, treatment-resistant depression.
Results:
Compared with control participants, patients showed relatively decreased response in the anterior cingulate (rostral; right) with both negative and positive picture-caption pairs and in the medial frontal gyrus and hippocampus (all left) with positive picture-caption pairs. They demonstrated increased response in the inferior (right) and middle temporal gyri (left) with negative picture-caption pairs, and in the parahippocampal gyrus (right), inferior frontal gyrus (left), subgenual cingulate (right), striatum (right), and brain stem (left) with positive picture-caption pairs.
Conclusions:
Reduced medial/middle prefrontal and hippocampal activity may account for positive affect disturbances and temporal lobe hyperactivity for negative affect disturbances in treatment-resistant depression. The results also corroborate previous observations from resting positron emission tomography studies and further elucidate the association between hypoactive rostral cingulate and nonresponsiveness to treatment in depression.