Ford Judith M, Gray Max, Whitfield Susan L, Turken And U, Glover Gary, Faustman William O, Mathalon Daniel H
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, Calif 94305-5550, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2004 Feb;61(2):119-29. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.61.2.119.
Schizophrenia is associated with deficits in using context to establish prepotent responses in complex paradigms and failures to inhibit prepotent responses once established.
To assess prepotent response establishment and inhibition in patients with schizophrenia using event-related brain potential (ERP) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in a simple NoGo task. To combine fMRI and ERP data to focus on fMRI activations associated with the brief (approximately 200 ms) moment of context updating reflected in the NoGo P300 ERP component.
We collected ERP and fMRI data while subjects performed a NoGo task requiring a speedy button press to X stimuli (P=.88) but not to K stimuli (P=.12). The ERPs were collected at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, Calif; fMRIs were collected at Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.
We recruited patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia (n=11) from the community and the VA hospital and sex- and age-matched healthy control subjects (n=11) from the community.
Behavioral accuracy, P300 amplitudes and latencies, and fMRI activations suggested that patients with schizophrenia did not establish as strong a prepotent tendency to respond to the Go stimulus as healthy subjects. In healthy subjects, NoGo P300 was related to activations in the anterior cingulate cortex, dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, and right inferior parietal lobule and caudate nucleus, perhaps reflecting conflict experienced when withholding a response, control needed to inhibit a response, and stopping a response in action, respectively. In patients with schizophrenia, NoGo P300 was modestly related to activations in the anterior cingulate cortex, which is consistent with experiencing conflict.
The difference in ERP and fMRI responses to Go and NoGo stimuli suggested that inhibiting a response was easier for patients with schizophrenia than for healthy subjects. Correlations of P300 and fMRI data suggested that patients with schizophrenia and healthy subjects used different neural structures to inhibit responses, with healthy subjects using a more complex system.
精神分裂症与在复杂范式中利用情境建立优势反应存在缺陷以及一旦建立优势反应后无法抑制该反应有关。
在一项简单的“不反应”任务中,使用事件相关脑电位(ERP)和功能磁共振成像(fMRI)评估精神分裂症患者的优势反应建立和抑制情况。结合fMRI和ERP数据,聚焦于与“不反应”P300 ERP成分中反映的短暂(约200毫秒)情境更新时刻相关的fMRI激活。
我们在受试者执行一项“不反应”任务时收集ERP和fMRI数据,该任务要求对X刺激快速按下按钮(P = 0.88),而对K刺激则不按(P = 0.12)。ERP数据在加利福尼亚州帕洛阿尔托的退伍军人事务部帕洛阿尔托医疗保健系统收集;fMRI数据在加利福尼亚州斯坦福大学收集。
我们从社区和退伍军人医院招募了符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)标准的精神分裂症患者(n = 11),并从社区招募了性别和年龄匹配的健康对照受试者(n = 11)。
行为准确性、P300波幅和潜伏期以及fMRI激活情况表明,精神分裂症患者对“执行”刺激建立的优势反应倾向不如健康受试者强烈。在健康受试者中,“不反应”P300与前扣带回皮质、背外侧前额叶皮质、右顶下小叶和尾状核的激活有关,可能分别反映了抑制反应时所经历的冲突、抑制反应所需的控制以及正在进行的反应的停止。在精神分裂症患者中,“不反应”P300与前扣带回皮质的激活有适度关联,这与经历冲突一致。
对“执行”和“不反应”刺激的ERP和fMRI反应差异表明,精神分裂症患者抑制反应比健康受试者更容易。P300与fMRI数据的相关性表明,精神分裂症患者和健康受试者在抑制反应时使用了不同的神经结构,健康受试者使用的是更复杂的系统。