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Dive into the research topics where Weihui Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Weihui Li.


Human Brain Mapping | 2014

Overlapping and Segregated Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder With and Without Childhood Neglect

Lifeng Wang; Zhengjia Dai; Hongjun Peng; Liwen Tan; Yuqiang Ding; Zhong He; Yan Zhang; Mingrui Xia; Zexuan Li; Weihui Li; Yi Cai; Shaojia Lu; Mei Liao; Li Zhang; Weiwei Wu; Yong He; Lingjiang Li

Many studies have suggested that childhood maltreatment increase risk of adulthood major depressive disorder (MDD) and predict its unfavorable treatment outcome, yet the neural underpinnings associated with childhood maltreatment in MDD remain poorly understood. Here, we seek to investigate the whole‐brain functional connectivity patterns in MDD patients with childhood maltreatment. Resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to explore intrinsic or spontaneous functional connectivity networks of 18 MDD patients with childhood neglect, 20 MDD patients without childhood neglect, and 20 healthy controls. Whole‐brain functional networks were constructed by measuring the temporal correlations of every pairs of brain voxels and were further analyzed by using graph‐theory approaches. Relative to the healthy control group, the two MDD patient groups showed overlapping reduced functional connectivity strength in bilateral ventral medial prefrontal cortex/ventral anterior cingulate cortex. However, compared with MDD patients without a history of childhood maltreatment, those patients with such a history displayed widespread reduction of functional connectivity strength primarily in brain regions within the prefrontal‐limbic‐thalamic‐cerebellar circuitry, and these reductions significantly correlated with measures of childhood neglect. Together, we showed that the MDD groups with and without childhood neglect exhibited overlapping and segregated functional connectivity patterns in the whole‐brain networks, providing empirical evidence for the contribution of early life stress to the pathophysiology of MDD. Hum Brain Mapp 35:1154–1166, 2014.


Brain Research | 2007

Brain responses to symptom provocation and trauma-related short-term memory recall in coal mining accident survivors with acute severe PTSD

Cailan Hou; Jun Liu; Kun Wang; Lingjiang Li; Meng Liang; Zhong He; Yong Liu; Yan Zhang; Weihui Li; Tianzi Jiang

Functional neuroimaging studies have largely been performed in patients with longstanding chronic posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Additionally, memory function of PTSD patients has been proved to be impaired. We sought to characterize the brain responses of patients with acute PTSD and implemented a trauma-related short-term memory recall paradigm. Individuals with acute severe PTSD (n=10) resulting from a mining accident and 7 men exposed to the mining accident without PTSD underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while performing the symptom provocation and trauma-related short-term memory recall paradigms. During symptom provocation paradigm, PTSD subjects showed diminished responses in right anterior cingulate gyrus, left inferior frontal gyrus and bilateral middle frontal gyrus and enhanced left parahippocampal gyrus response compared with controls. During the short-term memory recall paradigm, PTSD group showed diminished responses in right inferior frontal gyrus, right middle frontal and left middle occipital gyrus in comparison with controls. PTSD group exhibited diminished right parahippocampal gyrus response during the memory recall task as compared to the symptom provocation task. Our findings suggest that neurophysiological alterations and memory performance deficit have developed in acute severe PTSD.


Neuroscience Letters | 2011

Abnormal baseline brain activity in posttraumatic stress disorder: A resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study

Yan Yin; Lingjiang Li; Changfeng Jin; Xiaolei Hu; Lian Duan; Lisa T. Eyler; Qiyong Gong; Ming Song; Tianzi Jiang; Mei Liao; Yan Zhang; Weihui Li

Little is known about how spontaneous brain activity during the resting state may be altered in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) compared to traumatized individuals. In the current study, we used a measure of amplitude of low-frequency (0.01-0.08 Hz) fluctuation (ALFF) to investigate the regional baseline brain function of this disorder. Fifty-four medication-naive PTSD patients and seventy-two matched traumatized comparison subjects who experienced the Sichuan major earthquake participated in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan. We analyzed the difference between the PTSD and comparison groups during a resting state using ALFF. PTSD patients showed decreased ALFF values in right lingual gyrus, cuneus, middle occipital gyrus, insula, and cerebellum, and increased ALFF values in right medial and middle frontal gyri, relative to traumatized individuals without PTSD. The ALFF value in the right medial frontal gyrus was positively correlated with severity of the disorder. Our findings show that abnormality of intrinsic brain activity exists under resting conditions in PTSD patients exposed to a major earthquake. Altered ALFF in predominantly right hemisphere cortical and subcortical regions and in cerebellum potentially contribute to the neural mechanisms underlying traumatic memory and symptoms in PTSD.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2013

Elevated specific peripheral cytokines found in major depressive disorder patients with childhood trauma exposure: a cytokine antibody array analysis.

Shaojia Lu; Hongjun Peng; Lifeng Wang; Seewoobudul Vasish; Yan Zhang; Weijia Gao; Weiwei Wu; Mei Liao; Mi Wang; Hao Tang; Wenping Li; Weihui Li; Zexuan Li; Jiansong Zhou; Zhijun Zhang; Lingjiang Li

Taking into consideration the previous evidence of revealing the relationship of early life adversity, major depressive disorder (MDD), and stress-linked immunological changes, we recruited 22 MDD patients with childhood trauma exposures (CTE), 21 MDD patients without CTE, and 22 healthy controls without CTE, and then utilized a novel cytokine antibody array methodology to detect potential biomarkers underlying MDD in 120 peripheral cytokines and to evaluate the effect of CTE on cytokine changes in MDD patients. Although 13 cytokines were identified with highly significant differences in expressions between MDD patients and normal controls, this relationship was significantly attenuated and no longer significant after consideration of the effect of CTE in MDD patients. Depressed individuals with CTE (TD patients) were more likely to have higher peripheral levels of those cytokines. Severity of depression was associated with plasma levels of certain increased cytokines; meanwhile, the increased cytokines led to a proper separation of TD patients from normal controls during clustering analyses. Our research outcomes add great strength to the relationship between depression and cytokine changes and suggest that childhood trauma may play a vital role in the co-appearance of cytokine changes and depression.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2011

Different white matter abnormalities between the first-episode, treatment-naive patients with posttraumatic stress disorder and generalized anxiety disorder without comorbid conditions

Li Zhang; Yan Zhang; Lingjiang Li; Zexuan Li; Weihui Li; Ning Ma; Cailan Hou; Zhijun Zhang; Zhiqiang Zhang; Lifeng Wang; Lian Duan; Guangming Lu

BACKGROUND This study compared brain white matter integrity in two groups of patients with DSM-IV anxiety disorders. METHOD Seventeen patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 20 with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and 28 healthy controls were assessed on diffusion tensor imaging. RESULTS As compared to healthy controls, increased fractional anisotropy (FA) in left superior frontal gyrus in PTSD patients, and increased FA in right postcentral gyrus in GAD subjects were exhibited. Furthermore, patients with PTSD showed reduced FA in right anterior cingulate gyrus relative to GAD subjects. However, there was no significant correlation between the FA value of any altered region and the severity of PTSD or GAD. LIMITATIONS The sample studied can be considered small. Gender and educational level were not well-matched among the groups. CONCLUSIONS We tentatively speculate that abnormal white matter integrity of right anterior cingulate gyrus is an important neuroimaging marker of PTSD that distinguishes it from other anxiety disorders such as GAD.


Brain Research | 2006

Enriched environment treatment counteracts enhanced addictive and depressive-like behavior induced by prenatal chronic stress

Jianli Yang; Weihui Li; Xiaohua Liu; Zexuan Li; Hongying Li; Guifu Yang; Lin Xu; Lingjiang Li

Prenatal stress can cause many long-term behavior changes in offspring, but whether prenatal stress can alter addictive behavior in offspring and postnatal enriched environment treatment (EE) can restore these changes are unknown. We reported here that prenatal chronic stress (10 unpredictable, 1 s, 0.8 mA foot-shocks per day during gestational days 13-19) enhanced morphine-induced (10 mg/kg, s.c., per day, 6 consecutive days) place preference. Moreover, prenatal chronic stress caused higher depressive-like behavior in forced swimming test in adult offspring. However, enriched environment housing treatment on postnatal days 22-52 counteracted both the abnormal behaviors alterations. This work observed a phenomenon that might contribute to the understanding of clinically important interactions among addiction, prenatal stress and enriched environment treatment. Postnatal enriched environment treatment might be an important therapeutic intervention in preventing the prenatal stress-induced addictive disorders.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2012

High-frequency rTMS treatment increases white matter FA in the left middle frontal gyrus in young patients with treatment-resistant depression

Hongjun Peng; Huirong Zheng; Lingjiang Li; Jianbin Liu; Yan Zhang; Baoci Shan; Li Zhang; Yan Yin; Jun Liu; Weihui Li; Jiansong Zhou; Zexuan Li; Hai-Chen Yang; Zhijun Zhang

BACKGROUND Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an effective treatment for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), but its therapeutic mechanisms are unclear. White matter abnormalities are thought to cause network dysfunction underlying TRD. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is an ideal tool for examining neural connections and the integrity of white matter. Few studies have used DTI to investigate the impact of rTMS on alterations of whiter matter in TRD. METHOD 30 young treatment-resistant unipolar depression patients (19 males and 11 females) were enrolled in a double-blind, randomized high-frequency (15 Hz) rTMS treatment study. Seventeen patients were treated with real stimulation, and 13 were treated with sham stimulation. White-matter fractional anisotropy (FA) was evaluated using voxel-based analysis (VBA) of FA maps derived from DTI before and after treatment. Twenty-five age- and gender-matched subjects were examined as a control group. RESULTS In an exploratory VBA method, clusters of fifty voxels or greater that survived a family-wise error (FWE)-corrected threshold of p<0.05 were considered significant. The results revealed significantly reduced FA in the left middle frontal gyrus, with peak coordinates [-18 46 -14] in TRD patients. This reduced FA was significantly improved after active rTMS treatment, but not sham stimulation. FA increases were correlated with decreased depressive symptoms. LIMITATIONS This study requires replication and further clarification in a larger patient population, and optimization of stimulation locations and methods. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that the efficacy of rTMS on TRD is related to increased white-matter FA in the left middle frontal gyrus.


Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 2013

White matter integrity alterations in young healthy adults reporting childhood trauma: A diffusion tensor imaging study:

Shaojia Lu; Zhaoguo Wei; Weijia Gao; Weiwei Wu; Mei Liao; Yan Zhang; Weihui Li; Zexuan Li; Lingjiang Li

Objective: To date, insufficient studies have focused on the relationship between childhood trauma and white matter integrity changes in healthy subjects. The aim of the present study was to explore the potential effects of childhood trauma on white matter microstructural changes by using voxel-based diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to examine alterations in fractional anisotropy (FA) values in a group of young healthy adults. Methods: A total of 21 healthy adults with a history of childhood trauma exposures and 21 age- and sex-matched individuals without childhood trauma were recruited in the present study. The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire was used to assess five aspects of childhood trauma exposures. DTI data were obtained on a Philips 3.0-Tesla scanner. Voxel-based analysis was conducted to compare white matter FA values between groups. Results: Adults with self-reported childhood trauma experiences showed decreased white matter FA values in the genu and body of the corpus callosum and the left occipital fusiform gyrus (p < 0.001 uncorrected, voxel > 100). There was no significant difference in FA values between individuals with single and multiple childhood trauma exposures at the defined threshold. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that childhood trauma is associated with reduced microstructural integrity of the white matter in adulthood. These effects are still evident even in the absence of current psychiatric or medical symptoms, which may represent the vulnerability for developing mental disorders after childhood trauma experiences.


Acta Neuropsychiatrica | 2012

Increased white matter integrity of posterior cingulate gyrus in the evolution of post-traumatic stress disorder

Li Zhang; Weihui Li; Ni Shu; Huirong Zheng; Zhijun Zhang; Yan Zhang; Zhong He; Cailan Hou; Zexuan Li; Jun Liu; Lifeng Wang; Lian Duan; Tianzi Jiang; Lingjiang Li

Objective: Functional imaging studies of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have shown an increased activation of posterior cingulate gyrus (PCG) of the brain. The aim of this study was to explore white matter integrity of PCG in PTSD subjects. Methods: White matter integrity, as determined from fractional anisotropy (FA) value using diffusion tensor imaging, was assessed for PCG in subjects with and without PTSD from a severe mine accident. All subjects were also measured by the PTSD Checklist Civilian Version (PCL-C), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the logical memory subtest and the visual reproduction subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised in China. Sixteen PTSD subjects (8 subjects in each group) in the longitudinal study and 13 PTSD subjects as well as 14 non-PTSD controls in the cross-sectional case–control study were respectively recruited. Results: In the longitudinal study, subjects with PTSD showed increased FA values in left PCG during the follow-up scan. In the cross-sectional study, FA values in bilateral PCG in PTSD subjects were higher than controls. Within the PTSD group (n = 13), FA values in the left PCG correlated positively with logical memory and negatively with PCL-C intrusion and STAI-trait (STAI-t) subscores. FA values in right PCG correlated negatively with STAI-t and STAI-state subscores. Conclusion: These findings suggest that alterations of white matter integrity in PCG link to mnemonic and affective processing in PTSD over the long-term follow-up period.


Neuroscience Bulletin | 2015

Grey matter volume abnormalities in patients with bipolar I depressive disorder and unipolar depressive disorder: a voxel-based morphometry study

Yi Cai; Jun Liu; Li Zhang; Mei Liao; Yan Zhang; Lifeng Wang; Hongjun Peng; Zhong He; Zexuan Li; Weihui Li; Shaojia Lu; Yu-Qiang Ding; Lingjiang Li

Bipolar disorder and unipolar depressive disorder (UD) may be different in brain structure. In the present study, we performed voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to quantify the grey matter volumes in 23 patients with bipolar I depressive disorder (BP1) and 23 patients with UD, and 23 age-, gender-, and education-matched healthy controls (HCs) using magnetic resonance imaging. We found that compared with the HC and UD groups, the BP1 group showed reduced grey matter volumes in the right inferior frontal gyrus and middle cingulate gyrus, while the UD group showed reduced volume in the right inferior frontal gyrus compared to HCs. In addition, correlation analyses revealed that the grey matter volumes of these regions were negatively correlated with the Hamilton depression rating scores. Taken together, the results of our study suggest that decreased grey matter volume of the right inferior frontal gyrus is a common abnormality in BP1 and UD, and decreased grey matter volume in the right middle cingulate gyrus may be specific to BP1.

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Lingjiang Li

Central South University

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Zexuan Li

Central South University

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Yan Zhang

Central South University

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Li Zhang

Central South University

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Cailan Hou

Central South University

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Jun Liu

Central South University

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Zhong He

Central South University

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Lifeng Wang

Central South University

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Mei Liao

Central South University

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