Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2010 Apr;167(4):418-26. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2009.09060808. Epub 2010 Mar 1.
Recognition memory of faces is impaired in patients with schizophrenia, as is the neural processing of threat-related signals, but how these deficits interact to produce symptoms is unclear. The authors used an affective face recognition paradigm to examine possible interactions between cognitive and affective neural systems in schizophrenia.
Blood-oxygen-level-dependent response was examined by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (3 Tesla) in healthy comparison subjects (N=21) and in patients with schizophrenia (N=12) or schizoaffective disorder, depressed type (N=4), during a two-choice recognition task that used images of human faces. Each target face, previously displayed with a threatening or nonthreatening affect, was displayed with neutral affect. Responses to successful recognition and responses to the effect of previously threatening versus nonthreatening affect were evaluated, and correlations with symptom severity (total Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale score) were examined. Functional connectivity analyses examined the relationship between activation in the amygdala and cortical regions involved in recognition memory.
Patients performed the task more slowly than healthy comparison subjects. Comparison subjects recruited the expected cortical regions to a greater degree than patients, and patients with more severe symptoms demonstrated proportionally less recruitment. Increased symptoms were also correlated with augmented amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex response to threatening faces. Comparison subjects exhibited a negative correlation between activity in the amygdala and cortical regions involved in cognition, while patients showed weakening of this relationship.
Increased symptoms were related to an enhanced threat response in limbic regions and a diminished recognition memory response in cortical regions, supporting a link between these two brain systems that are often examined in isolation. This finding suggests that abnormal processing of threat-related signals in the environment may exacerbate cognitive impairment in schizophrenia.
精神分裂症患者的面孔识别记忆受损,对与威胁相关的信号的神经处理也是如此,但这些缺陷如何相互作用产生症状尚不清楚。作者使用情感面孔识别范式,研究精神分裂症中认知和情感神经系统之间可能存在的相互作用。
通过功能磁共振成像(3 特斯拉),在健康对照组(N=21)和精神分裂症患者(N=12)或分裂情感障碍,抑郁型患者(N=4)中检查了与威胁相关的信号的神经处理。在使用人类面孔图像的二选一识别任务中,检查了血氧水平依赖性反应。每个目标面孔之前都显示出威胁或非威胁的影响,然后显示出中性影响。评估了对成功识别的反应和对先前威胁与非威胁影响的反应,并与症状严重程度(总简明精神病评定量表评分)进行了相关性分析。功能连接分析检查了杏仁核和参与识别记忆的皮质区域之间的激活关系。
患者完成任务的速度比健康对照组慢。对照组比患者更充分地募集了预期的皮质区域,而症状更严重的患者则相应地募集得更少。症状的增加也与威胁面孔时杏仁核和眶额皮层反应的增加有关。对照组表现出杏仁核与认知相关皮质区域之间的活动呈负相关,而患者则表现出这种关系的减弱。
症状的增加与边缘区域对威胁反应的增强以及皮质区域对识别记忆反应的减弱有关,这支持了这两个经常单独检查的大脑系统之间的联系。这一发现表明,环境中与威胁相关的信号的异常处理可能会加重精神分裂症的认知障碍。