From the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ulm University Hospital, Ulm, Germany (Straub, Brown, Bonenberger, Plener); the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy III, Ulm University Hospital, Ulm, Germany (Malejko, Grön, Abler); and the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (Plener).
J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2019 Jul 1;44(4):237-245. doi: 10.1503/jpn.170233.
Investigating adolescents and young adults may provide a unique opportunity to understand developmental aspects of the neurobiology of depression. During adolescence, a considerable physiologic reorganization of both grey and white matter of the brain takes place, and it has been suggested that differences in grey-matter volumes during adolescence may reflect different maturational processes.
We investigated grey-matter volumes in a comparatively large sample (n = 103) of adolescents and young adults (aged 12 to 27 years), 60 of them with a diagnosis of current depression.
Replicating previous studies, we found a clear wholebrain effect of age: the older the participants, the lower their global grey-matter volumes, particularly in the paracingulate and prefrontal cortices. Contrasting depressed and healthy youth in a whole-brain approach, we found greater grey-matter volumes in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of those with depression. Furthermore, a region-of-interest analysis indicated lower grey-matter volumes in the hippocampus in participants with depression compared with healthy controls.
The present study was limited because of a skewed sex distribution, its cross-sectional design and the fact that some participants were taking an antidepressant.
During adolescence, restructuring of the brain is characterized by marked decreases in prefrontal grey-matter volumes, interpreted as a correlate of brain maturation. Findings of greater volumes in the prefrontal cortex, particularly in younger adolescents with depression, may suggest that these participants were more prone to delayed brain maturation or increased neuroplasticity. This finding may represent a risk factor for depression or constitute an effect of developing depression.
研究青少年和年轻人可能为了解抑郁的神经生物学的发展方面提供了一个独特的机会。在青春期,大脑的灰质和白质都发生了相当大的生理重组,有人认为,青春期灰质体积的差异可能反映了不同的成熟过程。
我们在一个相对较大的青少年和年轻人样本(n = 103)中调查了灰质体积,其中 60 人被诊断为当前患有抑郁症。
复制先前的研究,我们发现了年龄对整个大脑的明显影响:参与者年龄越大,他们的全脑灰质体积越低,特别是在旁中央和前额皮质。在全脑方法中对比抑郁和健康的年轻人,我们发现抑郁者的背外侧前额皮质灰质体积较大。此外,感兴趣区域分析表明,与健康对照组相比,抑郁参与者的海马体灰质体积较低。
本研究存在一些局限性,因为存在性别分布偏倚、横断面设计以及部分参与者正在服用抗抑郁药。
在青春期,大脑的重塑以前额叶灰质体积的显著减少为特征,这被解释为大脑成熟的相关因素。在患有抑郁症的年轻青少年中,发现前额叶皮层体积更大,可能表明这些参与者更容易出现大脑成熟延迟或神经可塑性增加。这一发现可能代表抑郁的风险因素或构成发展性抑郁的影响。