Author/Authors :
Roxann Roberson-Nay، نويسنده , , Erin B. McClure، نويسنده , , Christopher S. Monk، نويسنده , , Eric E. Nelson، نويسنده , , Amanda E. Guyer، نويسنده , , Stephen J. Fromm، نويسنده , , Dennis S. Charney، نويسنده , , Ellen Leibenluft، نويسنده , , James Blair، نويسنده , , Monique Ernst، نويسنده , , Daniel S. Pine، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
Although major depressive disorder (MDD) represents one of the most serious psychiatric problems afflicting adolescents, efforts to understand the neural circuitry of adolescent MDD have lagged behind those of adult MDD. This study tests the hypothesis that adolescent MDD is associated with abnormal amygdala activity during evocative-face viewing.
Methods
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), between-group differences among MDD (n = 10), anxious (n = 11), and non-psychiatric comparisons (n = 23) were examined during successful vs. unsuccessful face encoding, with encoding success measured post-scan.
Results
Compared to healthy adolescents, MDD patients exhibited poorer memory for faces. fMRI analyses accounted for this performance difference through event-related methods. In an analysis comparing successful vs. unsuccessful face encoding, MDD patients exhibited greater left amygdala activation relative to healthy and anxious youth.
Conclusions
Given prior findings among adults, this study suggests that adolescent and adult MDD may involve similar underlying abnormalities in amygdala functioning
Keywords :
Amygdala , Anxiety , Encoding , fMRI , MDD , recognitionmemory