How are irritability and anhedonia symptoms linked? A network approach

Author:

Sistiaga Sonia1ORCID,Tseng Wan‐Ling2,Zhang Lanting3,Rossignol Mandy1,Bellaert Nellia1

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Psychology and Neuropsychology Department University of Mons Mons Belgium

2. Yale Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine Yale University New Haven CT USA

3. Nuffield Department of Clinical Neuroscience University of Oxford Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAnhedonia and irritability are two prevalent symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) that predict greater depression severity and poor outcomes, including suicidality. Although both symptoms have been proposed to result from paradoxical reward processing dysfunctions, the interactions between these symptoms remain unclear. Anhedonia is a multifaceted symptom reflecting impairments in multiple dimensions of reward processing (e.g., pleasure, desire, motivation, and effort) across distinct reward types (e.g., food, sensory experiences, social activities, hobbies) that may differentially interact with irritability. This study investigated the complex associations between anhedonia and irritability using network analysis.MethodParticipants (N = 448, Mage = 33.29, SD = 14.58) reported their symptoms of irritability on the Brief Irritability Test (Holtzman et al., 2015) and anhedonia (i.e., pleasure, desire, motivation, and effort dimensions across four reward types) on the Dimensional Anhedonia Rating Scale (Rizvi et al., 2015). A regularized Gaussian Graphical Model was built to estimate the network structure between items.ResultsIrritability was negatively related to willingness to expand effort to obtain food/drinks (estimate = −0.18), social activities (−0.13), and hobbies (−0.12) rewards. Irritability was positively associated with a desire for food/drinks (0.12).LimitationsOnly a small proportion (5.8%) of our sample was clinical and the study design was cross‐sectional.ConclusionA specific link between irritability and the effort dimension of the hedonic response across three reward types was identified. Investigating effort expenditure deficits with experimental paradigms may help us understand the mechanisms underlying the comorbidity between irritability and anhedonia in the context of MDD.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Fonds De La Recherche Scientifique - FNRS

Yale Center for Clinical Investigation, Yale School of Medicine

Charles H. Hood Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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