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Aberrant functional connectivity of the globus pallidus in the modulation of the relationship between childhood trauma and major depressive disorder. | LitMetric

Aberrant functional connectivity of the globus pallidus in the modulation of the relationship between childhood trauma and major depressive disorder.

J Psychiatry Neurosci

From the Department of Clinical Psychology, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China (Xia, Lin, Yu T, Yu H, Zou, Luo, Peng); the Guangdong Engineering Technology Research Center for Translational Medicine of Mental Disorders, Guangzhou, China (Luo, Peng)

Published: July 2024

Background: Childhood trauma plays a crucial role in the dysfunctional reward circuitry in major depressive disorder (MDD). We sought to explore the effect of abnormalities in the globus pallidus (GP)-centric reward circuitry on the relationship between childhood trauma and MDD.

Methods: We conducted seed-based dynamic functional connectivity (dFC) analysis among people with or without MDD and with or without childhood trauma. We explored the relationship between abnormal reward circuitry, childhood trauma, and MDD.

Results: We included 48 people with MDD and childhood trauma, 30 people with MDD without childhood trauma, 57 controls with childhood trauma, and 46 controls without childhood trauma. We found that GP subregions exhibited abnormal dFC with several regions, including the inferior parietal lobe, thalamus, superior frontal gyrus (SFG), and precuneus. Abnormal dFC in these GP subregions showed a significant correlation with childhood trauma. Moderation analysis revealed that the dFC between the anterior GP and SFG, as well as between the anterior GP and the precentral gyrus, modulated the relationship between childhood abuse and MDD severity. We observed a negative correlation between childhood trauma and MDD severity among patients with lower dFC between the anterior GP and SFG, as well as higher dFC between the anterior GP and precentral gyrus. This suggests that reduced dFC between the anterior GP and SFG, along with increased dFC between the anterior GP and precentral gyrus, may attenuate the effect of childhood trauma on MDD severity.

Limitations: Cross-sectional designs cannot be used to infer causality.

Conclusion: Our findings underscore the pivotal role of reward circuitry abnormalities in MDD with childhood trauma. These abnormalities involve various brain regions, including the postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus, inferior parietal lobe, precuneus, superior frontal gyrus, thalamus, and middle frontal gyrus.

Clinical Trial Registration: ChiCTR2300078193.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11230669PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1503/jpn.240019DOI Listing

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