Authors
Stephanie Krüger, David Seminowicz, Kim Goldapple, Sidney H Kennedy, Helen S Mayberg
Publication date
2003/12/1
Journal
Biological psychiatry
Volume
54
Issue
11
Pages
1274-1283
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
BACKGROUND
Even in remission, patients with bipolar disorder (BD) remain sensitive to external stressors that can trigger new episodes. Imitating such stressors by the controlled transient exposure to an emotional stimulus may help to identify brain regions modulating this sensitivity.
METHODS
Transient sadness was induced in 9 euthymic and in 11 depressed subjects with BD. Regional blood flow (rCBF) changes were measured using 15O-water positron emission tomography.
RESULTS
Common changes in both groups were increased rCBF in anterior insula and cerebellum and decreased rCBF in dorsal-ventral-medial frontal cortex, posterior cingulate, inferior parietal, and temporal cortices. Decreases in dorsal ventral medial frontal cortices occurred in both groups, but subjects in remission showed a greater magnitude of change. Unique to remitted subjects with BD were rCBF increases in dorsal anterior …
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