Research Service, Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
Psychiatry Res. 2010 May 30;182(2):81-7. doi: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2010.02.003. Epub 2010 Apr 24.
Medial cortex is critically involved in self-referential processing. Little is known about how selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) affect medial cortical activity during self-assessment. We hypothesized that a 3-week oral course of escitalopram,10 mg/day, would alter activity related to self-referential processing in medial cortex. Fifteen healthy females performed a self-assessment task during functional magnetic resonance imaging on two occasions--once after 3 weeks of placebo and once at the end of 3 weeks of escitalopram. Task conditions involved responding "yes" or "no" to whether various positive and negative adjectives described the subject (i.e., "self" evaluation trials) or the subject's best friend (i.e., "other" evaluation trials), whereas the comparison condition involved responding whether the valence of various adjectives was positive or negative (i.e., "word" evaluation trials). Behaviorally after escitalopram, subjects less frequently endorsed that negative adjectives described themselves. Three main neuroimaging results were observed: (1) increased activation in medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate related to self minus word evaluation trials, (2) increased activation in posterior cingulate related to escitalopram minus placebo for self and word evaluation trials, and (3) drug by task interactions in the insula, cerebellum and prefrontal cortex. These results show that SSRIs change medial cortical activity and may alter self-evaluation.
内侧前额叶皮层和后扣带回与自我-词语比较任务相关的活动增加,(2)与自我和词语评估任务相关的后扣带回中与安慰剂相比,接受依他普仑治疗时的活动增加,(3)岛叶、小脑和前额叶皮层的药物-任务相互作用。这些结果表明,SSRIs 改变了内侧皮层的活动,并可能改变自我评估。