Abstract

BackgroundPatients with bipolar disorder (BD) show deficits of facial emotion processing even in the euthymic phase. However, the large-scale functional brain network mechanism underlying the emotional deficit of BD remains unclear. Specifically, it is of importance to understand how the task-modulated functional connectivity (FC) was alternated over distributed brain networks in BD. MethodsIn this study, we analyzed functional MRI data of a face-matching task from 29 euthymic BD patients and 29 healthy controls (HC), and performed whole-brain psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis to obtain task-modulated FC. Abnormal FC patterns were identified through support vector machine-based classification. The topological organization of task-modulated FC networks was estimated by the graph theoretical analysis and compared between BD and HC. ResultsBD exhibited widely distributed aberrant task-modulated FC patterns not only in core neurocognitive intrinsic brain networks (the fronto-parietal, cingulo-opercular, and default mode networks), but also in the cerebellum and primary processing networks (sensorimotor and visual). Furthermore, the local efficiency of the frontal-parietal network was significantly increased in BD. LimitationsThe modest sample size. Only face pictures with negative emotion were used. Only unidirectional task-modulated FC was investigated. ConclusionsBD patients showed a widely distributed aberrant task-modulated FC pattern. Particularly, the fronto-parietal network, as one of the core neurocognitive intrinsic brain networks, was the primary network that demonstrated changes of both FC strength and local efficiency in BD. These findings on the task-modulated FC between these intrinsic brain networks might be considered an endophenotype of the BD condition persistent in the euthymic state.

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