Author:
Brandt Christine Lycke,Eichele Tom,Melle Ingrid,Sundet Kjetil,Server Andrés,Agartz Ingrid,Hugdahl Kenneth,Jensen Jimmy,Andreassen Ole A.
Abstract
BackgroundSchizophrenia and bipolar disorder are severe mental disorders with
overlapping genetic and clinical characteristics, including cognitive
impairments. An important question is whether these disorders also have
overlapping neuronal deficits.AimsTo determine whether large-scale brain networks associated with working
memory, as measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),
are the same in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and how they
differ from those in healthy individuals.MethodPatients with schizophrenia (n = 100) and bipolar
disorder (n = 100) and a healthy control group
(n = 100) performed a 2-back working memory task
while fMRI data were acquired. The imaging data were analysed using
independent component analysis to extract large-scale networks of
task-related activations.ResultsSimilar working memory networks were activated in all groups. However, in
three out of nine networks related to the experimental task there was a
graded response difference in fMRI signal amplitudes, where patients with
schizophrenia showed greater activation than those with bipolar disorder,
who in turn showed more activation than healthy controls. Secondary
analysis of the patient groups showed that these activation patterns were
associated with history of psychosis and current elevated mood in bipolar
disorder.ConclusionsThe same brain networks were related to working memory in schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder and controls. However, some key networks showed a graded
hyperactivation in the two patient groups, in line with a continuum of
neuronal abnormalities across psychotic disorders.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
63 articles.
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