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Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels

BACKGROUND: The amygdala is a subcortical limbic structure consisting of histologically and functionally distinct subregions. New automated structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) segmentation tools facilitate the in vivo study of individual amygdala nuclei in clinical populations such as patien...

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Autores principales: Wronski, Marie-Louis, Geisler, Daniel, Bernardoni, Fabio, Seidel, Maria, Bahnsen, Klaas, Doose, Arne, Steinhäuser, Jonas L., Gronow, Franziska, Böldt, Luisa V., Plessow, Franziska, Lawson, Elizabeth A., King, Joseph A., Roessner, Veit, Ehrlich, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10358440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36464660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291722003609
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author Wronski, Marie-Louis
Geisler, Daniel
Bernardoni, Fabio
Seidel, Maria
Bahnsen, Klaas
Doose, Arne
Steinhäuser, Jonas L.
Gronow, Franziska
Böldt, Luisa V.
Plessow, Franziska
Lawson, Elizabeth A.
King, Joseph A.
Roessner, Veit
Ehrlich, Stefan
author_facet Wronski, Marie-Louis
Geisler, Daniel
Bernardoni, Fabio
Seidel, Maria
Bahnsen, Klaas
Doose, Arne
Steinhäuser, Jonas L.
Gronow, Franziska
Böldt, Luisa V.
Plessow, Franziska
Lawson, Elizabeth A.
King, Joseph A.
Roessner, Veit
Ehrlich, Stefan
author_sort Wronski, Marie-Louis
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The amygdala is a subcortical limbic structure consisting of histologically and functionally distinct subregions. New automated structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) segmentation tools facilitate the in vivo study of individual amygdala nuclei in clinical populations such as patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) who show symptoms indicative of limbic dysregulation. This study is the first to investigate amygdala nuclei volumes in AN, their relationships with leptin, a key indicator of AN-related neuroendocrine alterations, and further clinical measures. METHODS: T1-weighted MRI scans were subsegmented and multi-stage quality controlled using FreeSurfer. Left/right hemispheric amygdala nuclei volumes were cross-sectionally compared between females with AN (n = 168, 12–29 years) and age-matched healthy females (n = 168) applying general linear models. Associations with plasma leptin, body mass index (BMI), illness duration, and psychiatric symptoms were analyzed via robust linear regression. RESULTS: Globally, most amygdala nuclei volumes in both hemispheres were reduced in AN v. healthy control participants. Importantly, four specific nuclei (accessory basal, cortical, medial nuclei, corticoamygdaloid transition in the rostral-medial amygdala) showed greater volumetric reduction even relative to reductions of whole amygdala and total subcortical gray matter volumes, whereas basal, lateral, and paralaminar nuclei were less reduced. All rostral-medially clustered nuclei were positively associated with leptin in AN independent of BMI. Amygdala nuclei volumes were not associated with illness duration or psychiatric symptom severity in AN. CONCLUSIONS: In AN, amygdala nuclei are altered to different degrees. Severe volume loss in rostral-medially clustered nuclei, collectively involved in olfactory/food-related reward processing, may represent a structural correlate of AN-related symptoms. Hypoleptinemia might be linked to rostral-medial amygdala alterations.
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spelling pubmed-103584402023-09-27 Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels Wronski, Marie-Louis Geisler, Daniel Bernardoni, Fabio Seidel, Maria Bahnsen, Klaas Doose, Arne Steinhäuser, Jonas L. Gronow, Franziska Böldt, Luisa V. Plessow, Franziska Lawson, Elizabeth A. King, Joseph A. Roessner, Veit Ehrlich, Stefan Psychol Med Original Article BACKGROUND: The amygdala is a subcortical limbic structure consisting of histologically and functionally distinct subregions. New automated structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) segmentation tools facilitate the in vivo study of individual amygdala nuclei in clinical populations such as patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) who show symptoms indicative of limbic dysregulation. This study is the first to investigate amygdala nuclei volumes in AN, their relationships with leptin, a key indicator of AN-related neuroendocrine alterations, and further clinical measures. METHODS: T1-weighted MRI scans were subsegmented and multi-stage quality controlled using FreeSurfer. Left/right hemispheric amygdala nuclei volumes were cross-sectionally compared between females with AN (n = 168, 12–29 years) and age-matched healthy females (n = 168) applying general linear models. Associations with plasma leptin, body mass index (BMI), illness duration, and psychiatric symptoms were analyzed via robust linear regression. RESULTS: Globally, most amygdala nuclei volumes in both hemispheres were reduced in AN v. healthy control participants. Importantly, four specific nuclei (accessory basal, cortical, medial nuclei, corticoamygdaloid transition in the rostral-medial amygdala) showed greater volumetric reduction even relative to reductions of whole amygdala and total subcortical gray matter volumes, whereas basal, lateral, and paralaminar nuclei were less reduced. All rostral-medially clustered nuclei were positively associated with leptin in AN independent of BMI. Amygdala nuclei volumes were not associated with illness duration or psychiatric symptom severity in AN. CONCLUSIONS: In AN, amygdala nuclei are altered to different degrees. Severe volume loss in rostral-medially clustered nuclei, collectively involved in olfactory/food-related reward processing, may represent a structural correlate of AN-related symptoms. Hypoleptinemia might be linked to rostral-medial amygdala alterations. Cambridge University Press 2023-10 2022-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10358440/ /pubmed/36464660 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291722003609 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Wronski, Marie-Louis
Geisler, Daniel
Bernardoni, Fabio
Seidel, Maria
Bahnsen, Klaas
Doose, Arne
Steinhäuser, Jonas L.
Gronow, Franziska
Böldt, Luisa V.
Plessow, Franziska
Lawson, Elizabeth A.
King, Joseph A.
Roessner, Veit
Ehrlich, Stefan
Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title_full Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title_fullStr Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title_full_unstemmed Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title_short Differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
title_sort differential alterations of amygdala nuclei volumes in acutely ill patients with anorexia nervosa and their associations with leptin levels
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10358440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36464660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291722003609
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