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Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment

Network mechanisms of depression development and especially of improvement from nonpharmacological treatment remain understudied. The current study is aimed at examining brain networks functional connectivity in depressed patients and its dynamics in nonpharmacological treatment. Resting state fMRI...

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Autores principales: Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D., Melnikov, Mikhail Ye., Savelov, Andrey A., Kozlova, Lyudmila I., Petrovskiy, Evgeniy D., Natarova, Kira A., Shtark, Mark B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822653/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33510782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8846097
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author Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D.
Melnikov, Mikhail Ye.
Savelov, Andrey A.
Kozlova, Lyudmila I.
Petrovskiy, Evgeniy D.
Natarova, Kira A.
Shtark, Mark B.
author_facet Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D.
Melnikov, Mikhail Ye.
Savelov, Andrey A.
Kozlova, Lyudmila I.
Petrovskiy, Evgeniy D.
Natarova, Kira A.
Shtark, Mark B.
author_sort Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D.
collection PubMed
description Network mechanisms of depression development and especially of improvement from nonpharmacological treatment remain understudied. The current study is aimed at examining brain networks functional connectivity in depressed patients and its dynamics in nonpharmacological treatment. Resting state fMRI data of 21 healthy adults and 51 patients with mild or moderate depression were analyzed with spatial independent component analysis; then, correlations between time series of the components were calculated and compared between-group (study 1). Baseline and repeated-measure data of 14 treated (psychotherapy or fMRI neurofeedback) and 15 untreated depressed participants were similarly analyzed and correlated with changes in depression scores (study 2). Aside from diverse findings, studies 1 and 2 both revealed changes in within-default mode network (DMN) and DMN to executive control network (ECN) connections. Connectivity in one pair, initially lower in depression, decreased in no treatment group and was inversely correlated with Montgomery-Asberg depression score change in treatment group. Weak baseline connectivity in this pair also predicted improvement on Montgomery-Asberg scale in both treatment and no treatment groups. Coupling of another pair, initially stronger in depression, increased in therapy though was unrelated to improvement. The results demonstrate possible role of within-DMN and DMN-ECN functional connectivity in depression treatment and suggest that neural mechanisms of nonpharmacological treatment action may be unrelated to normalization of initially disrupted connectivity.
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spelling pubmed-78226532021-01-27 Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D. Melnikov, Mikhail Ye. Savelov, Andrey A. Kozlova, Lyudmila I. Petrovskiy, Evgeniy D. Natarova, Kira A. Shtark, Mark B. Neural Plast Research Article Network mechanisms of depression development and especially of improvement from nonpharmacological treatment remain understudied. The current study is aimed at examining brain networks functional connectivity in depressed patients and its dynamics in nonpharmacological treatment. Resting state fMRI data of 21 healthy adults and 51 patients with mild or moderate depression were analyzed with spatial independent component analysis; then, correlations between time series of the components were calculated and compared between-group (study 1). Baseline and repeated-measure data of 14 treated (psychotherapy or fMRI neurofeedback) and 15 untreated depressed participants were similarly analyzed and correlated with changes in depression scores (study 2). Aside from diverse findings, studies 1 and 2 both revealed changes in within-default mode network (DMN) and DMN to executive control network (ECN) connections. Connectivity in one pair, initially lower in depression, decreased in no treatment group and was inversely correlated with Montgomery-Asberg depression score change in treatment group. Weak baseline connectivity in this pair also predicted improvement on Montgomery-Asberg scale in both treatment and no treatment groups. Coupling of another pair, initially stronger in depression, increased in therapy though was unrelated to improvement. The results demonstrate possible role of within-DMN and DMN-ECN functional connectivity in depression treatment and suggest that neural mechanisms of nonpharmacological treatment action may be unrelated to normalization of initially disrupted connectivity. Hindawi 2021-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7822653/ /pubmed/33510782 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8846097 Text en Copyright © 2021 Dmitry D. Bezmaternykh et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bezmaternykh, Dmitry D.
Melnikov, Mikhail Ye.
Savelov, Andrey A.
Kozlova, Lyudmila I.
Petrovskiy, Evgeniy D.
Natarova, Kira A.
Shtark, Mark B.
Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title_full Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title_fullStr Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title_short Brain Networks Connectivity in Mild to Moderate Depression: Resting State fMRI Study with Implications to Nonpharmacological Treatment
title_sort brain networks connectivity in mild to moderate depression: resting state fmri study with implications to nonpharmacological treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822653/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33510782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8846097
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