Craig Michael C, Fletcher Paul C, Daly Eileen M, Rymer Janice, Cutter William J, Brammer Mick, Giampietro Vincent, Wickham Harvey, Maki Pauline M, Murphy Declan G M
Section of Brain Maturation (PO50), Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, 16 De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF, UK.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2007 Sep-Nov;32(8-10):1116-27. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2007.09.009. Epub 2007 Nov 5.
Gonadotropin hormone releasing hormone agonists (GnRHa) are commonly used in clinical practice to suppress gonadal hormone production in the management of various gynaecological conditions and as a treatment for advanced breast and prostate cancer. Animal and human behavioural studies suggest that GnRHa may also have significant effects on memory. However, despite the widespread use of GnRHa, the underlying brain networks and/or stages of memory processing that might be modulated by GnRHa remain poorly understood. We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the effect of GnRHa on verbal encoding and retrieval. Neuroimaging outcomes from 15 premenopausal healthy women were assessed at baseline and 8 weeks after Gonadotrophin Releasing Hormone analogue (GnRHa) treatment. Fifteen matched wait-listed volunteers served as the control group and were assessed at similar intervals during the late follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. GnRHa was associated with changes in brain response during memory encoding but not retrieval. Specifically, GnRHa administration led to a change in the typical pattern of prefrontal activation during successful encoding, with decreased activation in left prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, and medial frontal gyrus. Our study suggests that the memory difficulties reported by some women following GnRHa, and possibly at other times of acute ovarian hormone withdrawal (e.g. following surgical menopause and postpartum), may have a clear neurobiological basis; one that manifest during encoding of words and that is evident in decreased activation in prefrontal regions known to sub-serve deep processing of to-be-learned words.
促性腺激素释放激素激动剂(GnRHa)在临床实践中常用于抑制性腺激素的产生,以治疗各种妇科疾病,以及作为晚期乳腺癌和前列腺癌的治疗方法。动物和人类行为学研究表明,GnRHa可能对记忆也有显著影响。然而,尽管GnRHa被广泛使用,但GnRHa可能调节的潜在脑网络和/或记忆处理阶段仍知之甚少。我们使用事件相关功能磁共振成像来研究GnRHa对言语编码和检索的影响。在基线时以及促性腺激素释放激素类似物(GnRHa)治疗8周后,对15名绝经前健康女性的神经影像学结果进行了评估。15名匹配的候补志愿者作为对照组,在月经周期的卵泡晚期以相似的时间间隔进行评估。GnRHa与记忆编码过程中的大脑反应变化有关,但与检索无关。具体而言,GnRHa给药导致成功编码期间前额叶激活的典型模式发生变化,左侧前额叶皮质、前扣带回和内侧额回的激活减少。我们的研究表明,一些女性在使用GnRHa后以及可能在其他急性卵巢激素撤退时期(例如手术绝经后和产后)报告的记忆困难可能有明确的神经生物学基础;这种基础在单词编码过程中表现出来,并且在前额叶区域激活减少中明显可见,这些区域已知有助于对要学习的单词进行深度处理。