Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
335421 Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Regional and network pulvinar dysfunction were explored in MDD.•Pharmacological modulation of pulvinar local and network function was tested in MDD.•MDD is related with causal over-feeding of pulvinar on DMN and posterior insula.•Duloxetine modulates pulvinar regional activity in a frequency-band dependent manner.•Pulvinar aberrant network function can be corrected by pharmacological treatment.

The pulvinar, the largest thalamus nucleus, has rich anatomical connections with several different cortical and subcortical regions suggesting its important involvement in high-level cognitive and emotional functions. Unfortunately, pulvinar dysfunction in psychiatric disorders particularly major depression disorder has not been thoroughly examined to date. In this study we explored the alterations in the baseline regional and network activities of the pulvinar in MDD by applying spectral analysis of resting-state oscillatory activity, functional connectivity and directed (effective) connectivity on resting-state fMRI data acquired from 20 healthy controls and 19 participants with MDD. Furthermore, we tested how pharmacological treatment with duloxetine can modulate the measured local and network variables in ten participants who completed treatment. Our results revealed a frequency-band dependent modulation of power spectrum characteristics of pulvinar regional oscillatory activity. At the network level, we found MDD is associated with aberrant causal interactions between pulvinar and several systems including default-mode and posterior insular networks. It was also shown that duloxetine treatment can correct or overcompensate the pathologic network behavior of the pulvinar. In conclusion, we suggest that pulvinar regional baseline oscillatory activity and its resting-state network dynamics are compromised in MDD and can be modulated therapeutically by pharmacological treatment.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Biological Psychiatry
Authors
, , , , , , , ,