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. 2021 Oct;6(10):1023-1033.
doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.03.006. Epub 2021 Mar 23.

Recovery-Associated Resting-State Activity and Connectivity Alterations in Anorexia Nervosa

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Recovery-Associated Resting-State Activity and Connectivity Alterations in Anorexia Nervosa

Leon D Lotter et al. Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2021 Oct.

Abstract

Background: Previous studies provided controversial insight on the impact of starvation, disease status, and underlying gray matter volume (GMV) changes on resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging alterations in anorexia nervosa (AN). Here, we adapt a combined longitudinal and cross-sectional approach to disentangle the effects of these factors on resting-state alterations in AN.

Methods: Overall, 87 female subjects were included in the study: adolescent patients with acute AN scanned at inpatient admission (n = 22, mean age 15.3 years) and at discharge (n = 21), patients who recovered from AN (n = 21, mean age 22.3 years), and two groups of healthy age-matched control subjects (both n = 22, mean age 16.0 and 22.5 years, respectively). Whole-brain measures of resting-state activity and functional connectivity were computed (network-based statistics, global correlation, integrated local correlation, and fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations) to assess resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging alterations over the course of AN treatment before and after controlling for underlying GMV.

Results: Patients with acute AN displayed strong and widespread prefrontal, sensorimotor, parietal, temporal, precuneal, and insular reductions of resting-state connectivity and activity. All alterations were independent of GMV and were largely normalized in short-term recovered AN and absent in long-term recovered patients.

Conclusions: Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging alterations in AN constitute acute and GMV-independent, presumably starvation-related, phenomena. The majority of alterations found here normalized over the course of recovery without evidence for possible preexisting trait- or remaining "scar" effects.

Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Functional connectivity; Gray matter volume; Longitudinal; Recovery; Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging.

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