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. 2012 Dec 15;72(12):1035-42.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.06.009. Epub 2012 Jul 7.

Functional brain activation to emotionally valenced faces in school-aged children with a history of preschool-onset major depression

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Functional brain activation to emotionally valenced faces in school-aged children with a history of preschool-onset major depression

Deanna M Barch et al. Biol Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Background: Recent research has demonstrated that clinical depression can emerge as early as the preschool period. Here, we examine brain function in children with a history of preschool-onset depression (PO-MDD) in comparison with healthy children.

Methods: Participants were medication naïve school-aged children (ages 7-11) with PO-MDD (n = 22) or no psychiatric history (n = 16) followed longitudinally as part of the Preschool Depression Study. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging measures of blood oxygen level-dependent signal to examine functional brain activity in response to emotionally valenced faces (sad, fearful, angry, happy, neutral) following a negative mood induction provided to all children.

Results: In categorical group comparisons, children with PO-MDD demonstrated increased activity in parietal cortex in response to sad faces but no differences in brain activity in a priori regions of interest (e.g., amygdala). However, in dimensional analyses, the severity of depression symptoms at the baseline preschool assessment predicted increased responses to sad faces in amygdala, hippocampal, parietal, and orbital frontal regions.

Conclusions: School-aged children with a history of PO-MDD showed patterns of functional brain responses to emotionally evocative stimuli similar to patterns found in adults and adolescents with major depression. These patterns were most strongly related to the severity of depression during the preschool period, suggesting that the magnitude of early symptoms may be particularly important for understanding altered brain function. These findings suggest that an early episode of depression before age 6 may be associated with enduring brain change or may represent a biomarker that was present even before the preschool episode.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Results of whole brain analyses comparing PO-MDD children and healthy controls. A) Brain slices illustrating regions showing regions displaying significant diagnostic group (PO-MDD vs. Control) × emotion (neutral, sad, fear, angry, happy) interactions B) Graph illustrating the pattern of responses in right precuneus. C) Graph illustrating the pattern of responses in right occipital cortex.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Results of a priori ROI analyses examining the correlations between depression severity at the baseline preschool assessment and functional brain response to sad faces. A) Brain slices illustrating regions showing regions displaying significant correlations between functional brain responses to sad versus neutral faces and the severity of depression at the initial preschool assessment. Z values represent millimeters above or below the line bisecting the anterior and posterior commissures. B) Scatter plot illustrating the correlation in the amygdala between functional brain responses to sad versus neutral faces and the dimensional assessment of depression severity at the initial preschool assessment. Blue triangles indicate healthy control children and green circles indicate children with a history of PO-MDD.

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