Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, CT, USA.
Neuroimage Clin. 2020;27:102358. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102358. Epub 2020 Jul 22.
Auditory hallucinations are prevalent across the major psychotic disorders, but their underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Limited prior work supports a hypothesis of altered auditory/language brain systems. To more definitively assess this, we examined whether alterations in resting state connectivity of auditory and language cortices are associated with hallucination severity in a large sample of individuals in the schizo-bipolar spectrum.
Whole brain resting state connectivity of auditory and language cortex (primary auditory cortex, unimodal auditory association cortex, Wernicke's area [speech and heteromodal association cortex] and Broca's area [speech production motor]) was evaluated for 243 subjects with schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or bipolar disorder with psychosis and 186 healthy controls from the Bipolar Schizophrenia Network on Intermediate Phenotypes (B-SNIP) study. Regression analyses were conducted to evaluate whether resting state connectivity of auditory and language cortex was a significant predictor of current overall hallucination severity (information about specific modality of hallucinations experienced was not available).
Increased connectivity between lower and higher order regions of left temporal-parietal auditory/language processing cortex was associated with worse hallucination severity for all psychosis patients. Additionally, within bipolar subjects, increased interhemispheric connectivity between higher order temporal-parietal auditory/language regions was related to greater hallucination severity. When patients were categorized by B-SNIP biomarker-based Biotype groups, interhemispheric connectivity between left auditory association cortex and right core auditory cortex was related to greater hallucination severity for Biotype 1 patients. Exploratory analyses resulted in different patterns of connectivity of auditory/language cortex in patients and controls, unrelated to current hallucination severity.
Although the findings cannot be precisely attributed to auditory hallucination severity or possible differences in such experiences between groups, increased connectivity among the left hemisphere auditory and receptive language cortex may represent a significant factor contributing to hallucination severity across psychotic disorders, and additional subgroup specific connectivity alterations may also be present.
幻听普遍存在于各种主要的精神疾病中,但它们的潜在机制尚未得到充分理解。先前的有限研究支持听觉/语言脑系统改变的假说。为了更明确地评估这一点,我们在一个大样本的精神分裂症-双相谱系个体中,研究了听觉和语言皮质静息状态连接的改变是否与幻听严重程度相关。
对 243 名患有精神分裂症、分裂情感障碍或伴有精神病的双相障碍患者和 186 名来自双相精神分裂症网络中间表型(Bipolar Schizophrenia Network on Intermediate Phenotypes,B-SNIP)研究的健康对照者的听觉和语言皮质(初级听觉皮质、单模态听觉联合皮质、Wernicke 区[言语和异模态联合皮质]和 Broca 区[言语产生运动])的全脑静息状态连接进行了评估。回归分析用于评估听觉和语言皮质的静息状态连接是否是当前整体幻听严重程度的显著预测因子(没有关于所经历的特定幻觉模态的信息)。
左侧颞顶叶听觉/语言处理皮质的低级和高级区域之间的连接增加与所有精神病患者的幻听严重程度增加有关。此外,在双相障碍患者中,高级颞顶叶听觉/语言区域之间的大脑半球间连接增加与幻听严重程度增加有关。当根据 B-SNIP 生物标志物为基础的 Biotype 分组对患者进行分类时,左侧听觉联合皮质与右侧核心听觉皮质之间的大脑半球间连接与 Biotype 1 患者的幻听严重程度增加有关。探索性分析导致了患者和对照组听觉/语言皮质的不同连接模式,与当前的幻听严重程度无关。
尽管这些发现不能精确归因于幻听严重程度或组间可能存在的此类体验差异,但左半球听觉和接受性语言皮质之间的连接增加可能是各种精神疾病幻听严重程度的一个重要因素,并且可能还存在其他亚组特异性的连接改变。