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Chinese Journal of Neuromedicine ; (12): 263-269, 2024.
Article Dans Chinois | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1035990

Résumé

Objective:To investigate the changes of abnormal spontaneous brain activity and whole-brain effector connectivity in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) by combining low frequency amplitude (ALFF) and Granger causality analysis (GCA), and explore their relations with clinical symptoms.Methods:Forty-nine patients with OCD admitted to Department of Psychiatry, Second Affiliated Hospital of Xinxiang Medical College from January 2020 to September 2023 were selected as OCD group; 50 healthy volunteers matched with gender, age and years of education were enrolled as healthy control (HC) group. Obsessive-compulsive symptoms and severities in the OCD group were assessed by Yale Brown obsessive-compulsive scale (Y-BOCS). All subjects underwent whole-brain resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning (rs-fMRI). ALFF differences between the 2 groups were compared. Brain regions with ALFF differences were used as seed points, and effector connectivity changes in seed points were compared with those in whole-brain by GCA. Correlations of ALFF and effector connectivity in brain regions with ALFF differences with total scores, obsession scores and compulsion scores of Y-BOCS were analyzed by partial correlation analysis.Results:(1) Compared with that in the HC group, ALFF was significantly enhanced in the right supplementary motor area, right hippocampus, left caudate nucleus, and right fusiform gyrus, and statistically attenuated in the left suboccipital gyrus in the OCD group ( P<0.05). (2) Compared with that in the HC group, effector connectivity from the right dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus to right supplementary motor area was significantly attenuated, and effector connectivity from the left superior occipital gyrus to right supplementary motor area was significantly enhanced in the OCD group ( P<0.05); compared with that in the HC group, effector connectivity from the right fusiform gyrus to right precentral gyrus was significantly attenuated, and effector connectivity from the right hippocampus to left mesial temporal gyrus was significantly enhanced in the OCD group ( P<0.05). (3) In OCD patients, altered ALFF in the left caudate nucleus was positively correlated with obsession scores ( r=0.357, P=0.027), and altered effector connectivity from the right dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus to right supplementary motor area was negatively correlated with obsession scores ( r=-0.312, P=0.029). Conclusion:Abnormalities in sensorimotor network function are closely related to clinical symptoms in patients with OCD.

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