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Abnormal beta bursts of depression in the orbitofrontal cortex and its relationship with clinical symptoms.

Authors :
Xue, Li
Hu, Xiaowen
Zhang, Siqi
Dai, Zhongpeng
Zhou, Hongliang
Chen, Zhilu
Yao, Zhijian
Lu, Qing
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Jan2025, Vol. 369, p1168-1177. 10p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Recent researches have reported that frequency-specific patterns of neural activity contain not only rhythmically sustained oscillations but also transient-bursts of isolated events. The aim of this study was to investigated the correlation between beta burst and depression in order to explore depressive disease and the neurological underpinnings of disease-related symptoms. We collected resting-state MEG recordings from 30 depressive patients and a matched 40 healthy controls. A Hidden Markov Model (HMM) was applied on source-space time courses for 78 cortical regions of the AAL atlas and the temporal characteristics of beta burst from the matched HMM states were captured. Group differences were evaluated on these beta burst characteristics after permutation tests and, for the depressive group, associations between burst characteristics and clinical symptom severity were determined using Spearman correlation coefficients. At a threshold of p = 0.05 corrected, burst characteristics revealed significant differences between depression patients and controls at the group level, including increased burst amplitude in frontal lobe, decreased burst duration in occipital regions, increased burst rate and decreased burst interval time in some brain regions. Furthermore, burst amplitude in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) was positively related to the severity of sleep disturbance and burst rate in the OFC was negatively related to the severity of anxiety in depression patients. The findings highlight OFC may be a targeted area responsible for the anxiety and sleep disturbance symptom by abnormal beta burst in depressive patients and beta burst characteristics of OFC might serve as a neuro-marker for the depression. • Our framework explored the correlation between beta burst and depression. • Burst amplitude in the orbitofrontal cortex the was positive correlated with sleep disturbance. • Burst rate and burst interval time in the orbitofrontal cortex were associated with anxiety. • Orbitofrontal cortex is a key area linked to anxiety and sleep disturbance in depression, driven by abnormal beta bursts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
369
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181092266
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.10.092