Archive | 2021

Dynamics of amygdala connectivity in bipolar disorders: A longitudinal study across mood states

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Alterations in activity and connectivity of brain circuits implicated in emotion processing and emotion regulation have been observed during resting-state for different clinical phases of bipolar disorders (BD), but longitudinal investigations across different mood states in the same patients are still rare. Furthermore, measuring dynamics of functional connectivity patterns offers a powerful method to explore changes in the brain intrinsic functional organization across mood states. We used a novel co-activation pattern (CAP) analysis to explore the dynamics of amygdala connectivity at rest in a cohort of 20 BD patients prospectively followed-up and scanned across distinct mood states: euthymia (20 patients; 39 sessions), depression (12 patients; 18 sessions), or mania/hypomania (14 patients; 18 sessions). We compared them to 41 healthy controls scanned once or twice (55 sessions). We characterized temporal aspects of dynamic fluctuations in amygdala connectivity over the whole brain as a function of current mood. We identified 6 distinct networks describing amygdala connectivity, among which an interoceptive-sensorimotor CAP exhibited more frequent occurrences during hypomania compared to other mood states, and predicted more severe symptoms of irritability and motor agitation. In contrast, a limbic CAP comprising the hippocampus and ventral tegmental area exhibited fewer occurrences during both depression and hypomania compared to euthymia. Our results reveal distinctive interactions between amygdala and distributed brain networks in different mood states, and foster research on interoception systems especially during the manic phase. Our study also demonstrates the benefits of assessing brain dynamics in BD.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1101/2021.03.30.21254608
Language English
Journal None

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