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Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine

BACKGROUND: Faster acting antidepressants and biomarkers that predict treatment response are needed to facilitate the development of more effective treatments for patients with major depressive disorders. Here, we evaluate implicitly and explicitly processed emotional faces using neuroimaging to ide...

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Autores principales: Furey, Maura L., Drevets, Wayne C., Szczepanik, Joanna, Khanna, Ashish, Nugent, Allison, Zarate, Carlos A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4571629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25820840
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyv028
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author Furey, Maura L.
Drevets, Wayne C.
Szczepanik, Joanna
Khanna, Ashish
Nugent, Allison
Zarate, Carlos A.
author_facet Furey, Maura L.
Drevets, Wayne C.
Szczepanik, Joanna
Khanna, Ashish
Nugent, Allison
Zarate, Carlos A.
author_sort Furey, Maura L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Faster acting antidepressants and biomarkers that predict treatment response are needed to facilitate the development of more effective treatments for patients with major depressive disorders. Here, we evaluate implicitly and explicitly processed emotional faces using neuroimaging to identify potential biomarkers of treatment response to the antimuscarinic, scopolamine. METHODS: Healthy participants (n=15) and unmedicated-depressed major depressive disorder patients (n=16) participated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover infusion study using scopolamine (4 μg/kg). Before and following scopolamine, blood oxygen-level dependent signal was measured using functional MRI during a selective attention task. Two stimuli comprised of superimposed pictures of faces and houses were presented. Participants attended to one stimulus component and performed a matching task. Face emotion was modulated (happy/sad) creating implicit (attend-houses) and explicit (attend-faces) emotion processing conditions. The pretreatment difference in blood oxygen-level dependent response to happy and sad faces under implicit and explicit conditions (emotion processing biases) within a-priori regions of interest was correlated with subsequent treatment response in major depressive disorder. RESULTS: Correlations were observed exclusively during implicit emotion processing in the regions of interest, which included the subgenual anterior cingulate (P<.02) and middle occipital cortices (P<.02). CONCLUSIONS: The magnitude and direction of differential blood oxygen-level– dependent response to implicitly processed emotional faces prior to treatment reflect the potential to respond to scopolamine. These findings replicate earlier results, highlighting the potential for pretreatment neural activity in the middle occipital cortices and subgenual anterior cingulate to inform us about the potential to respond clinically to scopolamine.
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spelling pubmed-45716292015-09-28 Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine Furey, Maura L. Drevets, Wayne C. Szczepanik, Joanna Khanna, Ashish Nugent, Allison Zarate, Carlos A. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol Research Article BACKGROUND: Faster acting antidepressants and biomarkers that predict treatment response are needed to facilitate the development of more effective treatments for patients with major depressive disorders. Here, we evaluate implicitly and explicitly processed emotional faces using neuroimaging to identify potential biomarkers of treatment response to the antimuscarinic, scopolamine. METHODS: Healthy participants (n=15) and unmedicated-depressed major depressive disorder patients (n=16) participated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover infusion study using scopolamine (4 μg/kg). Before and following scopolamine, blood oxygen-level dependent signal was measured using functional MRI during a selective attention task. Two stimuli comprised of superimposed pictures of faces and houses were presented. Participants attended to one stimulus component and performed a matching task. Face emotion was modulated (happy/sad) creating implicit (attend-houses) and explicit (attend-faces) emotion processing conditions. The pretreatment difference in blood oxygen-level dependent response to happy and sad faces under implicit and explicit conditions (emotion processing biases) within a-priori regions of interest was correlated with subsequent treatment response in major depressive disorder. RESULTS: Correlations were observed exclusively during implicit emotion processing in the regions of interest, which included the subgenual anterior cingulate (P<.02) and middle occipital cortices (P<.02). CONCLUSIONS: The magnitude and direction of differential blood oxygen-level– dependent response to implicitly processed emotional faces prior to treatment reflect the potential to respond to scopolamine. These findings replicate earlier results, highlighting the potential for pretreatment neural activity in the middle occipital cortices and subgenual anterior cingulate to inform us about the potential to respond clinically to scopolamine. Oxford University Press 2015-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4571629/ /pubmed/25820840 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyv028 Text en Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of CINP 2015. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in the public domain in the US.
spellingShingle Research Article
Furey, Maura L.
Drevets, Wayne C.
Szczepanik, Joanna
Khanna, Ashish
Nugent, Allison
Zarate, Carlos A.
Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title_full Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title_fullStr Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title_full_unstemmed Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title_short Pretreatment Differences in BOLD Response to Emotional Faces Correlate with Antidepressant Response to Scopolamine
title_sort pretreatment differences in bold response to emotional faces correlate with antidepressant response to scopolamine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4571629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25820840
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyv028
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