Departments of Children and Adolescent Psychiatry,
Neurology, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jul 25;38(30):6779-6786. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0411-18.2018. Epub 2018 Jun 28.
Alterations in motivated behavior are a hallmark of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), one of the most common psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) plays a key role in controlling goal-directed behavior, but the link between OFC dysfunction and behavioral deficits in ADHD, particularly in adolescence, remains poorly understood. Here we used advanced high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the human OFC in adolescents with ADHD and typically developing (TD) controls ( = 39, age 12-16, all male except for one female per group) to study reward-related OFC responses and how they relate to behavioral dysfunction in ADHD. During fMRI data acquisition, participants performed a simple decision-making task, allowing us to image expectation-related responses to small and large monetary outcomes. Across all participants, we observed significant signal increases to large versus small expected rewards in the OFC. These responses were significantly enhanced in ADHD relative to TD participants. Moreover, stronger reward-related activity was correlated with individual differences in hyperactive/impulsive symptoms in the ADHD group, whereas high cognitive ability was associated with normalized OFC responses. These results provide evidence for the importance of OFC dysfunctions in the neuropathology of ADHD, highlighting the role of OFC-dependent goal-directed control mechanisms in this disorder. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is characterized by alterations in motivated behavior which can be understood as diminished goal-directed control. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) plays a key role in controlling goal-directed behavior, but its potential contribution to ADHD symptomatology remains poorly understood. Using high-resolution fMRI, we show that adolescent ADHD patients display enhanced OFC signaling of future rewards and that these increased reward-related responses are correlated with the severity of hyperactivity/impulsivity. These findings suggest that an inability to adequately evaluate future outcomes may translate into maladaptive behavior in ADHD patients. They also challenge the idea that dysfunctions in dopaminergic brain areas are the sole contributor to reward-related symptoms in ADHD and point to a central contribution of goal-directed control circuits in hyperactivity.
动机行为的改变是注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)的一个标志,ADHD 是儿童和青少年中最常见的精神障碍之一。眶额皮层(OFC)在控制目标导向行为方面起着关键作用,但 OFC 功能障碍与 ADHD 中的行为缺陷(尤其是在青春期)之间的联系仍知之甚少。在这里,我们使用先进的高分辨率功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对 ADHD 青少年和发育正常(TD)对照者(=39,年龄 12-16 岁,除每组一名女性外均为男性)的 OFC 进行了研究,以研究与奖励相关的 OFC 反应以及它们如何与 ADHD 中的行为障碍相关。在 fMRI 数据采集过程中,参与者执行了一个简单的决策任务,使我们能够对小和大货币收益的期望相关反应进行成像。在所有参与者中,我们观察到 OFC 中对大与小的预期奖励的信号显著增加。与 TD 参与者相比,ADHD 参与者的这些反应明显增强。此外,奖励相关活动越强,与 ADHD 组中多动/冲动症状的个体差异呈正相关,而高认知能力与正常的 OFC 反应相关。这些结果为 OFC 功能障碍在 ADHD 的神经病理学中的重要性提供了证据,强调了 OFC 依赖的目标导向控制机制在这种疾病中的作用。注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)的特征是动机行为的改变,可以理解为目标导向控制的减弱。眶额皮层(OFC)在控制目标导向行为方面起着关键作用,但它对 ADHD 症状学的潜在贡献仍知之甚少。使用高分辨率 fMRI,我们显示青少年 ADHD 患者显示出未来奖励的 OFC 信号增强,并且这些增加的奖励相关反应与多动/冲动的严重程度相关。这些发现表明,无法充分评估未来结果可能会导致 ADHD 患者的适应不良行为。它们还挑战了多巴胺能脑区功能障碍是 ADHD 中与奖励相关症状的唯一原因的观点,并指出目标导向控制回路在多动中的核心作用。