Baseline long‐term potentiation‐like cortical plasticity is associated with longitudinal cortical thinning in healthy adults and in adults with bipolar disorder type II

Author:

Zak Nathalia12ORCID,Moberget Torgeir1,Bøen Erlend3,Boye Birgitte34,Rygvold Trine W.5ORCID,Malt Ulrik F.26,Andreassen Ole A.12,Andersson Stein5,Westlye Lars T.15ORCID,Elvsåshagen Torbjørn127

Affiliation:

1. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT), KG Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

2. Institute of Clinical Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. Unit for Psychosomatics and C‐L psychiatry for adults Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

4. Department of Behavioral Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

5. Department of Psychology University of Oslo Oslo Norway

6. Department of Research and Education Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

7. Department of Neurology Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

Abstract

AbstractThe precise neurobiological processes underlying cerebral cortical thinning in aging and psychiatric illnesses remain undetermined, yet aging‐ and synaptic dysfunction‐related loss of synapses are potentially important mechanisms. We used long‐term potentiation‐like plasticity of the visual evoked potential as an index of synaptic function in the cortex and hypothesized that plasticity at baseline would be negatively associated with future cortical thinning in healthy adults and in adults with bipolar disorder type II. Thirty‐two healthy adults and 15 adults with bipolar disorder type II underwent electroencephalography‐based measurement of visual evoked potential plasticity and 3T magnetic resonance imaging of the brain at baseline and a follow‐up brain scan on average 2.3 years later. The relationships between visual evoked potential plasticity at baseline and longitudinal cortical thickness changes were examined using Freesurfer and the Permutation Analysis of Linear Models tool. The analyses showed a negative association between the plasticity of the N1 visual evoked potential amplitude at baseline and thinning rate in the medial and lateral parietal and medial occipital cortices in healthy adults and in the right medial occipital cortex in the total sample of healthy adults and adults with bipolar disorder type II, indicating greater thinning over time in subjects with less N1 plasticity (pFWER < .05). Although preliminary, the results indicate an association between visual evoked potential plasticity and the future rate of cortical thinning in healthy adults and in bipolar disorder type II, supporting the hypothesis that cortical thinning might be related to synaptic dysfunction.

Funder

Norges Forskningsråd

Helse Sør-Øst RHF

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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