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Pathological amygdala activation during working memory performance: Evidence for a pathophysiological trait marker in bipolar affective disorder. | LitMetric

Pathological amygdala activation during working memory performance: Evidence for a pathophysiological trait marker in bipolar affective disorder.

Hum Brain Mapp

Centre for Translational Research in Systems Neuroscience and Clinical Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Georg August University, Goettingen, Germany.

Published: January 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest that working memory deficits could be a key neurocognitive feature of bipolar affective disorder, yet the biological underpinnings of these deficits remain unclear.
  • The research involved functional MRI scans on 18 stable bipolar patients and 18 healthy volunteers, using specific tasks related to working memory that have been validated in earlier studies.
  • While both groups displayed similar brain activation patterns typical of healthy individuals, bipolar patients uniquely showed increased activity in the right amygdala and enhanced activation in other brain regions during a working memory task, indicating a distinctive brain abnormality linked to bipolar disorder that persists even when symptoms are not present.

Article Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that deficits of working memory may be a promising neurocognitive endophenotype of bipolar affective disorder. However, little is known about the neurobiological correlates of these deficits. The aim of this study was to determine possible pathophysiological trait markers of bipolar disorder in neural circuits involved in working memory. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 18 euthymic bipolar patients and 18 matched healthy volunteers using two circuit-specific experimental tasks established by prior systematic neuroimaging studies of working memory. Both euthymic bipolar patients and healthy controls showed working memory-related brain activations that were highly consistent with findings from previous comparable neuroimaging studies in healthy subjects. While these patterns of brain activation were completely preserved in the bipolar patients, only the patients exhibited activation of the right amygdala during the articulatory rehearsal task. In the same task, functional activation in right frontal and intraparietal cortex and in the right cerebellum was significantly enhanced in the patients. These findings indicate that the right amygdala is pathologically activated in euthymic bipolar patients during performance of a circuit-specific working memory task (articulatory rehearsal). This pathophysiological abnormality appears to be a trait marker in bipolar disorders that can be observed even in the euthymic state and that seems to be largely independent of task performance and medication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6871161PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.20849DOI Listing

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