Data Entry: Please note that the research database will be replaced by UNIverse by the end of October 2023. Please enter your data into the system https://universe-intern.unibas.ch. Thanks

Login for users with Unibas email account...

Login for registered users without Unibas email account...

 
Modulation of motivational salience processing during the early stages of psychosis
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3720856
Author(s) Smieskova, Renata; Roiser, Jonathan P.; Chaddock, Christopher A.; Schmidt, André; Harrisberger, Fabienne; Bendfeldt, Kerstin; Simon, Andor; Walter, Anna; Fusar-Poli, Paolo; McGuire, Philip K.; Lang, Undine E.; Riecher-Rössler, Anita; Borgwardt, Stefan
Author(s) at UniBasel Schmidt, André
Harrisberger, Fabienne
Riecher-Rössler, Anita
Year 2015
Title Modulation of motivational salience processing during the early stages of psychosis
Journal Schizophrenia Research
Volume 166
Number 1-3
Pages / Article-Number 17-23
Keywords Antipsychotic medication; Cingulate cortex; Functional MRI; Insula
Mesh terms Acute Disease; Adult; Antipsychotic Agents, therapeutic use; Brain, physiopathology; Brain Mapping; Cerebrovascular Circulation, physiology; Delusions, physiopathology; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Hallucinations, physiopathology; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Motivation, physiology; Neuropsychological Tests; Probability; Prodromal Symptoms; Prospective Studies; Psychotic Disorders, physiopathology; Reward; Young Adult
Abstract BACKGROUND: Deficits in motivational salience processing have been related to psychotic symptoms and disturbances in dopaminergic neurotransmission. We aimed at exploring changes in salience processing and brain activity during different stages of psychosis and antipsychotic medication effect. METHODS: We used fMRI during the Salience Attribution Task to investigate hemodynamic differences between 19 healthy controls (HCs), 34 at-risk mental state (ARMS) individuals and 29 individuals with first-episode psychosis (FEP), including a subgroup of 17 FEP without antipsychotic medication (FEP-UM) and 12 FEP with antipsychotic medication (FEP-M). Motivational salience processing was operationalized by brain activity in response to high-probability rewarding cues (adaptive salience) and in response to low-probability rewarding cues (aberrant salience). RESULTS: Behaviorally, adaptive salience response was not accelerated in FEP, although they correctly distinguished between trials with low and high reward probability. In comparison to HC, ARMS exhibited a lower hemodynamic response during adaptive salience in the right inferior parietal lobule and FEP-UM in the left dorsal cingulate gyrus. The FEP-M group exhibited a lower adaptive salience response than HC in the right insula and than ARMS in the anterior cingulate gyrus. In unmedicated individuals, the severity of hallucinations and delusions correlated negatively with the insular- and anterior cingulate hemodynamic response during adaptive salience. We found no differences in aberrant salience processing associated with behavior or medication. CONCLUSION: The changes in adaptive motivational salience processing during psychosis development reveal neurofunctional abnormalities in the somatosensory and premotor cortex. Antipsychotic medication seems to modify hemodynamic responses in the anterior cingulate and insula.
Publisher Elsevier
ISSN/ISBN 0920-9964 ; 1573-2509
URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2015.04.036
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/63066/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1016/j.schres.2015.04.036
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25999039
ISI-Number WOS:000359172200003
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

MCSS v5.8 PRO. 0.356 sec, queries - 0.000 sec ©Universität Basel  |  Impressum   |    
02/05/2024