Motor versus Psychomotor? Deciphering the Neural Source of Psychomotor Retardation in Depression

Author:

Song Xue Mei12,Liu Dong‐Yu12,Hirjak Dusan3,Hu Xi‐Wen4,Han Jin‐Fang4,Roe Anna Wang1,Yao De‐Zhong5,Tan Zhong‐Lin4,Northoff Georg6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery of the Second Affiliated Hospital Interdisciplinary Institute of Neuroscience and Technology School of Medicine Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310029 China

2. Key Laboratory of Biomedical Engineering of Ministry of Education Qiushi Academy for Advanced Studies College of Biomedical Engineering and Instrument Science Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310027 China

3. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Central Institute of Mental Health Medical Faculty Mannheim University of Heidelberg 69117 Mannheim Germany

4. Affiliated Mental Health Center & Hangzhou Seventh People's Hospital School of Medicine Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310013 China

5. The Clinical Hospital of Chengdu Brain Science Institute MOE Key Laboratory for Neuroinformation University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Chengdu 610054 China

6. University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research University of Ottawa Ottawa ON K1Z 7K4 Canada

Abstract

AbstractMajor depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by psychomotor retardation whose underlying neural source remains unclear. Psychomotor retardation may either be related to a motor source like the motor cortex or, alternatively, to a psychomotor source with neural changes outside motor regions, like input regions such as visual cortex. These two alternative hypotheses in main (n = 41) and replication (n = 18) MDD samples using 7 Tesla MRI are investigated. Analyzing both global and local connectivity in primary motor cortex (BA4), motor network and middle temporal visual cortex complex (MT+), the main findings in MDD are: 1) Reduced local and global synchronization and increased local‐to‐global output in motor regions, which do not correlate with psychomotor retardation, though. 2) Reduced local‐to‐local BA4 – MT+ functional connectivity (FC) which correlates with psychomotor retardation. 3) Reduced global synchronization and increased local‐to‐global output in MT+ which relate to psychomotor retardation. 4) Reduced variability in the psychophysical measures of MT+ based motion perception which relates to psychomotor retardation. Together, it is shown that visual cortex MT+ and its relation to motor cortex play a key role in mediating psychomotor retardation. This supports psychomotor over motor hypothesis about the neural source of psychomotor retardation in MDD.

Publisher

Wiley

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