Labonte Alyssa K, Camacho M Catalina, Moser Julia, Koirala Sanju, Laumann Timothy O, Marek Scott, Fair Damien, Sylvester Chad M
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri.
Neurosciences Graduate Program, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri.
Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci. 2024 Aug 8;4(6):100370. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2024.100370. eCollection 2024 Nov.
Many psychiatric conditions have their roots in early development. Individual differences in prenatal brain function (which is influenced by a combination of genetic risk and the prenatal environment) likely interact with individual differences in postnatal experience, resulting in substantial variation in brain functional organization and development in infancy. Neuroimaging has been a powerful tool for understanding typical and atypical brain function and holds promise for uncovering the neurodevelopmental basis of psychiatric illness; however, its clinical utility has been relatively limited thus far. A substantial challenge in this endeavor is the traditional approach of averaging brain data across groups despite individuals varying in their brain organization, which likely obscures important clinically relevant individual variation. Precision functional mapping (PFM) is a neuroimaging technique that allows the capture of individual-specific and highly reliable functional brain properties. Here, we discuss how PFM, through its focus on individuals, has provided novel insights for understanding brain organization across the life span and its promise in elucidating the neural basis of psychiatric disorders. We first summarize the extant literature on PFM in normative populations, followed by its limited utilization in studying psychiatric conditions in adults. We conclude by discussing the potential for infant PFM in advancing developmental precision psychiatry applications, given that many psychiatric disorders start during early infancy and are associated with changes in individual-specific functional neuroanatomy. By exploring the intersection of PFM, development, and psychiatric research, this article underscores the importance of individualized approaches in unraveling the complexities of brain function and improving clinical outcomes across development.
许多精神疾病都源于早期发育。产前脑功能的个体差异(受遗传风险和产前环境的综合影响)可能与产后经历的个体差异相互作用,导致婴儿期脑功能组织和发育出现显著差异。神经影像学一直是理解典型和非典型脑功能的有力工具,有望揭示精神疾病的神经发育基础;然而,到目前为止,其临床应用相对有限。这一努力中的一个重大挑战是,尽管个体的脑组织存在差异,但传统方法是对群体脑数据进行平均,这可能掩盖了重要的临床相关个体差异。精准功能图谱(PFM)是一种神经影像学技术,能够捕捉个体特异性且高度可靠的脑功能特性。在此,我们讨论PFM如何通过关注个体,为理解整个生命周期的脑组织结构提供了新的见解,以及它在阐明精神障碍神经基础方面的前景。我们首先总结了关于正常人群中PFM的现有文献,其次是其在研究成人精神疾病方面的有限应用。鉴于许多精神疾病始于婴儿早期并与个体特异性功能性神经解剖学变化相关,我们通过讨论婴儿PFM在推进发育精准精神病学应用方面的潜力来得出结论。通过探索PFM、发育和精神病学研究的交叉点,本文强调了个性化方法在揭示脑功能复杂性和改善整个发育过程中的临床结果方面的重要性。