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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Symptom-specific amygdala hyperactivity modulates motor control network in conversion disorder
Cornelius WeillerThomas HassaAlexandra SebastianJoachim LiepertRoger SchmidtOliver Tüschersubject
MaleEmotionslcsh:RC346-4290302 clinical medicineddc:150Brain Mappingmedicine.diagnostic_testfMRI05 social sciencesMotor CortexPsychophysiological InteractionRegular ArticleMiddle AgedAmygdalaMagnetic Resonance ImagingFacial ExpressionSubthalamic nucleusmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologylcsh:R858-859.7FemalePsychologyFacial RecognitionAdultCognitive NeuroscienceEmotion processingPsychogenic paresisMotor Activitylcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticsAmygdala050105 experimental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesSubthalamic NucleusmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingMotor networkConversion disorderlcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous systemNeural correlates of consciousnessMotor controlmedicine.diseaseConversion DisorderNeurology (clinical)Functional magnetic resonance imagingNeurocognitiveNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Initial historical accounts as well as recent data suggest that emotion processing is dysfunctional in conversion disorder patients and that this alteration may be the pathomechanistic neurocognitive basis for symptoms in conversion disorder. However, to date evidence of direct interaction of altered negative emotion processing with motor control networks in conversion disorder is still lacking. To specifically study the neural correlates of emotion processing interacting with motor networks we used a task combining emotional and sensorimotor stimuli both separately as well as simultaneously during functional magnetic resonance imaging in a well characterized group of 13 conversion disorder patients with functional hemiparesis and 19 demographically matched healthy controls. We performed voxelwise statistical parametrical mapping for a priori regions of interest within emotion processing and motor control networks. Psychophysiological interaction (PPI) was used to test altered functional connectivity of emotion and motor control networks. Only during simultaneous emotional stimulation and passive movement of the affected hand patients displayed left amygdala hyperactivity. PPI revealed increased functional connectivity in patients between the left amygdala and the (pre-)supplemental motor area and the subthalamic nucleus, key regions within the motor control network. These findings suggest a novel mechanistic direct link between dysregulated emotion processing and motor control circuitry in conversion disorder.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-12-21 | NeuroImage: Clinical |