Title of article :
Amygdala volumes in a sample of current depressed and remitted depressed patients and healthy controls
Author/Authors :
Lorenzetti، نويسنده , , Valentina and Allen، نويسنده , , Nicholas B. and Whittle، نويسنده , , Sarah and Yücel، نويسنده , , Murat، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
8
From page :
112
To page :
119
Abstract :
Background Depressive Disorder is associated with amygdala volumetric alterations. To date, it is still unclear (I) whether amygdala volumetric alterations constitute a state or a trait marker of MDD; (II) what influences the direction of amygdala morphometric changes (i.e., enlargement versus shrinkage); and (III) what the role of laterality is in amygdala volumetric alterations in MDD. s estigated amygdala volume in a sample of 31 currently depressed patients (cMDD), 31 healthy subjects with a previous diagnosis of MDD (rMDD) and 31 healthy controls, using images obtained from a 1.5 Tesla MRI scanner. The groups were matched for age and gender. s nd that left amygdala volumes of rMDD subjects were significantly larger as compared to healthy controls, and tended to be larger when compared to cMDD subjects. There was no difference in left amygdala volumes between cMDD patients and healthy controls. Right amygdala volumes did not differ between groups. sions that amygdala alterations were present only in remitted patients, we suggest that such alterations appear to be a state marker of MDD. Further, we found evidence of a lateralization effect, with changes in the left hemisphere only. Left amygdala enlargement in the rMDD group may represent a neurobiological marker of vulnerability to relapse, or may reflect recovery from MDD, whereby volumetric changes have resulted from stress associated with the last depressive episode.
Keywords :
Amygdala , Lateralization , STRESS , depression
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number :
1433138
Link To Document :
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