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Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression

Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) exhibit impaired control of cognitive and emotional systems, including deficient response selection and inhibition. Though these deficits are typically attributed to abnormal communication between macro-scale cortical networks, altered communication with...

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Autores principales: Loureiro, Joana R.A., Sahib, Ashish K., Vasavada, Megha, Leaver, Amber, Kubicki, Antoni, Wade, Benjamin, Joshi, Shantanu, Hellemann, Gerhard, Congdon, Eliza, Woods, Roger P., Espinoza, Randall, Narr, Katherine L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8476854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34571429
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102792
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author Loureiro, Joana R.A.
Sahib, Ashish K.
Vasavada, Megha
Leaver, Amber
Kubicki, Antoni
Wade, Benjamin
Joshi, Shantanu
Hellemann, Gerhard
Congdon, Eliza
Woods, Roger P.
Espinoza, Randall
Narr, Katherine L.
author_facet Loureiro, Joana R.A.
Sahib, Ashish K.
Vasavada, Megha
Leaver, Amber
Kubicki, Antoni
Wade, Benjamin
Joshi, Shantanu
Hellemann, Gerhard
Congdon, Eliza
Woods, Roger P.
Espinoza, Randall
Narr, Katherine L.
author_sort Loureiro, Joana R.A.
collection PubMed
description Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) exhibit impaired control of cognitive and emotional systems, including deficient response selection and inhibition. Though these deficits are typically attributed to abnormal communication between macro-scale cortical networks, altered communication with the cerebellum also plays an important role. Yet, how the circuitry between the cerebellum and large-scale functional networks impact treatment outcome in MDD is not understood. We thus examined how ketamine, which elicits rapid therapeutic effects in MDD, modulates cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response-inhibition using a functional imaging NoGo/Go task in MDD patients (N = 46, mean age: 39.2, 38.1% female) receiving four ketamine infusions, and healthy controls (N = 32, mean age:35.2, 71.4% female). We fitted psychophysiological-interaction (PPI) models for a functionally-derived cerebellar-seed and extracted average PPI in three target functional networks, frontoparietal (FPN), sensory-motor (SMN) and salience (SN) networks. Time and remission status were then evaluated for each of the networks and their network-nodes. Follow-up tests examined whether PPI-connectivity differed between patient remitter/non-remitters and controls. Results showed significant decreases in PPI-connectivity after ketamine between the cerebellum and FPN (p < 0.001) and SMN networks (p = 0.008) in remitters only (N = 20). However, ketamine-related changes in PPI-connectivity between the cerebellum and the SN (p = 0.003) did not vary with remitter status. Cerebellar-FPN, -SN PPI values at baseline were also associated with treatment outcome. Using novel methodology to quantify the functional coupling of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response-inhibition, our findings highlight that these loops play distinct roles in treatment response and could potentially serve as novel biomarkers for fast-acting antidepressant therapies in MDD.
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spelling pubmed-84768542021-10-04 Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression Loureiro, Joana R.A. Sahib, Ashish K. Vasavada, Megha Leaver, Amber Kubicki, Antoni Wade, Benjamin Joshi, Shantanu Hellemann, Gerhard Congdon, Eliza Woods, Roger P. Espinoza, Randall Narr, Katherine L. Neuroimage Clin Regular Article Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) exhibit impaired control of cognitive and emotional systems, including deficient response selection and inhibition. Though these deficits are typically attributed to abnormal communication between macro-scale cortical networks, altered communication with the cerebellum also plays an important role. Yet, how the circuitry between the cerebellum and large-scale functional networks impact treatment outcome in MDD is not understood. We thus examined how ketamine, which elicits rapid therapeutic effects in MDD, modulates cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response-inhibition using a functional imaging NoGo/Go task in MDD patients (N = 46, mean age: 39.2, 38.1% female) receiving four ketamine infusions, and healthy controls (N = 32, mean age:35.2, 71.4% female). We fitted psychophysiological-interaction (PPI) models for a functionally-derived cerebellar-seed and extracted average PPI in three target functional networks, frontoparietal (FPN), sensory-motor (SMN) and salience (SN) networks. Time and remission status were then evaluated for each of the networks and their network-nodes. Follow-up tests examined whether PPI-connectivity differed between patient remitter/non-remitters and controls. Results showed significant decreases in PPI-connectivity after ketamine between the cerebellum and FPN (p < 0.001) and SMN networks (p = 0.008) in remitters only (N = 20). However, ketamine-related changes in PPI-connectivity between the cerebellum and the SN (p = 0.003) did not vary with remitter status. Cerebellar-FPN, -SN PPI values at baseline were also associated with treatment outcome. Using novel methodology to quantify the functional coupling of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response-inhibition, our findings highlight that these loops play distinct roles in treatment response and could potentially serve as novel biomarkers for fast-acting antidepressant therapies in MDD. Elsevier 2021-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8476854/ /pubmed/34571429 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102792 Text en © 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Loureiro, Joana R.A.
Sahib, Ashish K.
Vasavada, Megha
Leaver, Amber
Kubicki, Antoni
Wade, Benjamin
Joshi, Shantanu
Hellemann, Gerhard
Congdon, Eliza
Woods, Roger P.
Espinoza, Randall
Narr, Katherine L.
Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title_full Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title_fullStr Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title_full_unstemmed Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title_short Ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
title_sort ketamine’s modulation of cerebro-cerebellar circuitry during response inhibition in major depression
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8476854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34571429
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102792
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