Ketamine alters neural processing of facial emotion recognition in healthy men: an fMRI study.

Neuroreport

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, Manchester University, 7th Floor, Williamson Building, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, UK.

Published: March 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Disruption of facial emotion perception is observed in neuropsychiatric disorders like depersonalization and schizophrenia, linked to altered brain region activity involved in emotion processing.
  • Ketamine, which causes emotional blunting in healthy individuals, was hypothesized to simulate the neural responses seen in these disorders by reducing activity in emotional brain regions and increasing activity in cognitive-processing areas.
  • In a study with healthy participants, ketamine was found to diminish limbic responses to fearful faces while enhancing responses to neutral faces in certain visual and cognitive areas, indicating a potential shift in how emotional stimuli are processed.

Article Abstract

Disruption of facial emotion perception occurs in neuropsychiatric disorders where the expression of emotion is dulled or blunted, for example depersonalization disorder and schizophrenia. It has been suggested that, in the clinical context of emotional blunting, there is a shift in the relative contribution of brain regions subserving cognitive and emotional processing. The non-competitive glutamate receptor antagonist ketamine produces such emotional blunting in healthy subjects. Therefore, we hypothesised that in healthy subjects ketamine would elicit neural responses to emotional stimuli which mimicked those reported in depersonalization disorder and schizophrenia. Thus, we predicted that ketamine would produce reduced activity in limbic and visual brain regions involved in emotion processing, and increased activity in dorsal regions of the prefrontal cortex and cingulate gyrus, both associated with cognitive processing and, putatively, with emotion regulation. Measuring BOLD signal change in fMRI, we examined the neural correlates of ketamine-induced emotional blunting in eight young right-handed healthy men receiving an infusion of ketamine or saline placebo while viewing alternating 30 s blocks of faces displaying fear versus neutral expressions. The normal pattern of neural response occurred in limbic and visual cortex to fearful faces during the placebo infusion. Ketamine abolished this: significant BOLD signal change was demonstrated only in left visual cortex. However, with ketamine, neural responses were demonstrated to neutral expressions in visual cortex, cerebellum and left posterior cingulate gyrus. Emotional blunting may be associated with reduced limbic responses to emotional stimuli and a relative increase in the visual cortical response to neutral stimuli.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200303030-00018DOI Listing

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