Department of Psychiatry (Sylvester, Myers, Perino, T.A. Smyser, Barch, Luby, Rogers), Department of Neurology (Kaplan, Kenley, C.D. Smyser), Department of Pediatrics (Warner, Rogers, C.D. Smyser), Department of Radiology (Barch, C.D. Smyser), and Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences (Barch), Washington University, St. Louis; Emotion and Development Branch, NIMH, Bethesda, Md. (Pine).
Am J Psychiatry. 2021 Aug 1;178(8):771-778. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.20050672. Epub 2021 Apr 26.
Excessive response to unexpected or "deviant" stimuli during infancy and early childhood represents an early risk marker for anxiety disorders. However, research has yet to delineate the specific brain regions underlying the neonatal response to deviant stimuli near birth and the relation to risk for anxiety disorders. The authors used task-based functional MRI (fMRI) to delineate the neonatal response to deviant stimuli and its relationship to maternal trait anxiety.
The authors used fMRI to measure brain activity evoked by deviant auditory stimuli in 45 sleeping neonates (mean age, 27.8 days; 60% female; 64% African American). In 41 of the infants, neural response to deviant stimuli was examined in relation to maternal trait anxiety on the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, a familial risk factor for offspring anxiety.
Neonates manifested a robust and widespread neural response to deviant stimuli that resembles patterns found previously in adults. Higher maternal trait anxiety was related to higher responses within multiple brain regions, including the left and right anterior insula, the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and multiple areas within the anterior cingulate cortex. These areas overlap with brain regions previously linked to anxiety disorders and other psychiatric illnesses in adults.
The neural architecture sensitive to deviant stimuli robustly functions in newborns. Excessive responsiveness of some circuitry components at birth may signal risk for anxiety and other psychiatric disorders.
婴儿期和幼儿期对意外或“异常”刺激的过度反应是焦虑障碍的早期风险标志物。然而,研究尚未确定新生儿对出生时异常刺激的反应的特定大脑区域,以及与焦虑障碍风险的关系。作者使用基于任务的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来描绘新生儿对异常刺激的反应及其与母体特质焦虑的关系。
作者使用 fMRI 测量了 45 名睡眠中新生儿(平均年龄 27.8 天;60%为女性;64%为非裔美国人)对异常听觉刺激的大脑活动。在其中 41 名婴儿中,根据状态-特质焦虑量表(State-Trait Anxiety Inventory)中的母体特质焦虑来检查对异常刺激的神经反应,该量表是后代焦虑的家族风险因素。
新生儿对异常刺激表现出强烈而广泛的神经反应,与以前在成年人中发现的模式相似。较高的母体特质焦虑与多个大脑区域内的更高反应相关,包括左、右前岛叶、腹外侧前额皮质和前扣带皮层的多个区域。这些区域与成年人中与焦虑障碍和其他精神疾病相关的大脑区域重叠。
对异常刺激敏感的神经结构在新生儿中稳健地发挥作用。出生时某些电路组件的过度反应可能预示着焦虑和其他精神障碍的风险。