Abstract

The striatal-pallidal pathway plays an important role in cognitive control and modulation of behaviors. Globus pallidus interna (GPi), as a primary output structure, is crucial in modulating excitation and inhibition. Studies of GPi in psychiatric illnesses are lacking given the technical challenges of examining this small and functionally diverse subcortical structure. 71 medication-naïve first episode schizophrenia (FES) participants and 73 healthy controls (HC) were recruited at the Shanghai Mental Health Center. Clinical symptoms and imaging data were collected at baseline and, in a subset of patients, 8weeks after initiating treatment. Resting-state functional connectivity of sub-regions of the GP were assessed using a novel mask that combines two atlases to create 8 ROIs in the GP. Baseline imaging data from 63 FES patients and 55 HC met quality standards and were analyzed. FES patients exhibited less negative connectivity and increased positive connectivity between the right anterior GPi and several cortical and subcortical areas at baseline compared to HC (PFWE<0.05). Positive functional connectivity between the right anterior GPi and several brain areas, including the right dorsal anterior cingulate gyrus, was associated with severity of positive symptoms (PFWE<0.05) and predicted treatment response after 8weeks (n=28, adjusted R2=0.486, p<0.001). Our results implicate striatal-pallidal-thalamic pathways in antipsychotic efficacy. If replicated, these findings may reflect failure of neurodevelopmental processes in adolescence and early adulthood that decrease functional connectivity as an index of failure of the limbic/associative GPi to appropriately inhibit irrelevant signals in psychosis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call