Kings' College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, Psychological Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Kings' College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, Psychological Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Appetite. 2020 Jan 1;144:104480. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2019.104480. Epub 2019 Oct 2.
Reward-centred models have proposed that anomalies in the basal ganglia circuitry that underlies reward learning and habit formation perpetuate anorexia nervosa (AN). The present study aimed to investigate the volume and shape of key basal ganglia regions, including the bilateral caudate, putamen, nucleus accumbens (NAcc), and globus pallidus in AN.
The present study combined data from two existing studies resulting in a sample size of 46 women with AN and 56 age-matched healthy comparison (HC) women. Group differences in volume and shape of the regions of interest were examined. Within the AN group, the impact of eating disorder characteristics on volume and shape of the basal ganglia regions were also explored.
The shape analyses revealed inward deformations in the left caudate, right NAcc, and bilateral ventral and internus globus pallidus, and outward deformations in the right middle and posterior globus pallidus in the AN group.
The present findings appear to fit with the theoretical models suggesting that there are alterations in the basal ganglia regions associated with habit formation and reward processing in AN. Further investigation of structural and functional connectivity of these regions in AN as well as their role in recovery would be of interest.
以奖励为中心的模型提出,奖励学习和习惯形成所依赖的基底神经节回路中的异常会使神经性厌食症(AN)持续存在。本研究旨在调查 AN 患者双侧尾状核、壳核、伏隔核(NAcc)和苍白球等关键基底神经节区域的体积和形状。
本研究结合了两项现有研究的数据,共纳入 46 名 AN 女性和 56 名年龄匹配的健康对照(HC)女性。检验了两组间感兴趣区域体积和形状的差异。在 AN 组内,还探讨了饮食失调特征对基底神经节区域体积和形状的影响。
形状分析显示,AN 组左侧尾状核、右侧 NAcc 以及双侧腹侧和 internus 苍白球向内变形,右侧中间和后苍白球向外变形。
本研究结果似乎符合理论模型,即 AN 患者的基底神经节区域与习惯形成和奖励处理有关的区域存在异常。进一步研究这些区域的结构和功能连接及其在恢复过程中的作用将是有趣的。