From the Institute for Translational Psychiatry, University of Münster, Münster, Germany (Steinmann, Dohm, Goltermann, Richter, Enneking, Lippitz, Repple, Mauritz, Dannlowski, Opel); the Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatic Medicine, University Hospital of Frankfurt/Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany (Repple); and the Department of Psychiatry, Jena University Hospital/Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Jena, Germany (Opel).
J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2022 Aug 10;47(4):E284-E292. doi: 10.1503/jpn.210180. Print 2022 Jul-Aug.
Anhedonia is a key symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD). Anhedonia is associated with aberrant reward processing, but whether it might interfere similarly with the neural processing of aversive stimuli, such as monetary loss, remains unknown. We aimed to investigate potential associations between anhedonia and neural response during reward and loss processing in patients with MDD.
We investigated blood-oxygen-level-dependent response in the orbitofrontal cortex, cingulate cortex, insula and basal ganglia during monetary reward and loss processing in 182 patients with MDD, using a card-guessing paradigm. We measured anhedonia with the Social and Physical Anhedonia Scale (SASPAS), and we tested for the main and interaction effects of SASPAS scores and the experimental condition (reward or loss) in a full factorial model.
We detected a negative main effect of anhedonia, as well as a significant interaction effect of anhedonia and the experimental condition, on orbitofrontal and insular neural response. Post hoc analyses revealed that the interaction was driven by a significant association between higher anhedonia scores and hypoactivation during loss processing. We observed no significant association between anhedonia and neural response during reward processing.
This study had a cross-sectional design.
Our findings confirmed that altered neural processing in the orbitofrontal cortex and insula is a neurobiological feature of anhedonic symptomatology in people with MDD. The pronounced association between anhedonia and blunted neural response during loss processing supports a broader concept for the neurobiological basis of anhedonia. Hence, MDD with anhedonic features might be characterized by reduced neural response to external stimuli, potentially because of amotivation.
快感缺失是重性抑郁障碍(MDD)的一个关键症状。快感缺失与异常的奖励处理有关,但它是否同样会干扰厌恶刺激(如金钱损失)的神经处理尚不清楚。我们旨在研究 MDD 患者在奖励和损失处理过程中快感缺失与神经反应之间的潜在关联。
我们使用卡片猜测范式,研究了 182 名 MDD 患者在金钱奖励和损失处理过程中眶额皮层、扣带皮层、岛叶和基底节的血氧水平依赖反应。我们使用社会和身体快感缺失量表(SASPAS)测量快感缺失,并在全因子模型中测试 SASPAS 评分和实验条件(奖励或损失)的主要和交互效应。
我们检测到快感缺失的负向主效应,以及快感缺失和实验条件之间的显著交互效应,对眶额和岛叶的神经反应有影响。事后分析表明,这种相互作用是由快感缺失评分较高与损失处理过程中的神经活动减弱之间的显著相关性驱动的。我们没有观察到快感缺失与奖励处理过程中的神经反应之间存在显著关联。
本研究采用了横断面设计。
我们的研究结果证实,眶额皮层和岛叶中神经处理的改变是 MDD 患者快感缺失症状的神经生物学特征。快感缺失与损失处理过程中神经反应迟钝之间的显著关联支持了对快感缺失神经生物学基础的更广泛概念。因此,具有快感缺失特征的 MDD 可能以对外界刺激的神经反应减少为特征,这可能是由于动机不足。