MD, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, 3811 O’Hara St, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;70(10):1. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.75.
IMPORTANCE—Suicide can be viewed as an escape from unendurable punishment at the cost of any future rewards. Could faulty estimation of these outcomes predispose to suicidal behavior? In behavioral studies, many of those who have attempted suicide misestimate expected rewards on gambling and probabilistic learning tasks.OBJECTIVES—To describe the neural circuit abnormalities that underlie disadvantageous choices in people at risk for suicide and to relate these abnormalities to impulsivity, which is one of the components of vulnerability to suicide.DESIGN—Case-control functional magnetic resonance imaging study of reward learning using are inforcement learning model.SETTING—University hospital and outpatient clinic.PATIENTS—Fifty-three participants 60 years or older, including 15 depressed patients who had attempted suicide, 18 depressed patients who had never attempted suicide (depressed control subjects), and 20 psychiatrically healthy controls.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES—Components of the cortical blood oxygenation level–dependent response tracking expected and unpredicted rewards.RESULTS—Depressed elderly participants displayed 2 distinct disruptions of control over reward-guided behavior. First, impulsivity and a history of suicide attempts (particularly poorly planned ones) were associated with a weakened expected reward signal in the paralimbic cortex,which in turn predicted the behavioral insensitivity to contingency change. Second, depression was associated with disrupted corticostriatothalamic encoding of unpredicted rewards, which in turn predicted the behavioral over sensitivity to punishment. These results were robust to the effects of possible brain damage from suicide attempts, depressive severity, co-occurring substance use and anxiety disorders, antidepressant and anticholinergic exposure, lifetime exposure to electroconvulsive therapy, vascular illness, and incipient dementia.CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE—Altered paralimbic reward signals and impulsivity and/or carelessness may facilitate unplanned suicidal acts. This pattern, also seen in gambling and cocaine use, may reflect a primary deficit in the paralimbic cortex or in its mesolimbic input. The over reactivity to punishment in depression may be caused in part by a disruption of appetitive learning in the corticostriatothalamic circuits.
重要性-自杀可以被视为逃避无法忍受的惩罚,而牺牲任何未来的回报。对这些结果的错误估计是否会导致自杀行为?在行为研究中,许多试图自杀的人在赌博和概率学习任务中错误估计了预期的奖励。
目的-描述自杀风险人群中导致不利选择的神经回路异常,并将这些异常与冲动联系起来,冲动是自杀易感性的组成部分之一。
设计-使用强化学习模型的奖励学习的病例对照功能磁共振成像研究。
地点-大学医院和门诊诊所。
患者-53 名 60 岁或以上的参与者,包括 15 名有自杀企图的抑郁患者、18 名从未有自杀企图的抑郁患者(抑郁对照组)和 20 名精神健康对照组。
主要结果和测量-皮质血氧水平依赖反应跟踪预期和未预测奖励的成分。
结果-老年抑郁参与者表现出两种不同的奖励指导行为控制障碍。首先,冲动和自杀企图的历史(特别是计划不周的自杀企图)与边缘皮层中预期奖励信号减弱有关,这反过来又预测了对连续变化的行为不敏感。其次,抑郁与未预测奖励的皮质纹状体丘脑编码中断有关,这反过来又预测了对惩罚的过度敏感。这些结果对自杀企图可能造成的大脑损伤、抑郁严重程度、共病物质使用和焦虑障碍、抗抑郁药和抗胆碱能药物暴露、一生中接受电惊厥治疗、血管疾病和早期痴呆的影响具有稳健性。
结论和相关性-改变的边缘奖励信号和冲动和/或粗心大意可能会促使计划外的自杀行为。这种模式也见于赌博和可卡因使用,可能反映了边缘皮层或其边缘内输入的主要缺陷。抑郁中对惩罚的过度反应部分可能是由于皮质纹状体丘脑回路中的奖赏学习中断所致。