Abstract

Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is a psychiatric condition characterized by late luteal phase affective, cognitive, and physical impairment. The disorder causes significant suffering in about 5% of women in their reproductive age. Altered sensitivity of cognitive-affective brain circuits to progesterone and its downstream metabolite allopregnanolone is suggested to underlie PMDD symptomatology. Core mood symptoms include irritability and anger, with aggression being the behavioral outcome of these symptoms. The present study sought to investigate the neural correlates of reactive aggression during the premenstrual phase in women with PMDD, randomized to a selective progesterone receptor modulator (SPRM) or placebo. Self-reports on the Daily Record of Severity of Problems were used to assess PMDD symptoms and gonadal hormone levels were measured by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 30 women with PMDD, while performing the point subtraction aggression paradigm. Overall, a high SPRM treatment response rate was attained (93%), in comparison with placebo (53.3%). Women with PMDD randomized to SPRM treatment had enhanced brain reactivity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex during the aggressive response condition. The fronto-cingulate reactivity during aggressive responses depended on treatment, with a negative relationship between brain reactivity and task-related aggressiveness found in the placebo but not the SPRM group. The findings contribute to define the role of progesterone in PMDD symptomatology, suggesting a beneficial effect of progesterone receptor antagonism, and consequent anovulation, on top-down emotion regulation, i.e., greater fronto-cingulate activity in response to provocation stimuli.

Highlights

  • Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is a mood disorder characterized by affective symptoms, such as irritability and anger, and more frequent reports of interpersonal conflicts [1, 2]

  • The main aim was to explore whether selective progesterone receptor modulator (SPRM) treatment results in differential brain reactivity and functional connectivity during/in response to provocation, along with retaliatory behavior in the point subtraction aggression paradigm (PSAP) compared with placebo, and whether differential reactivity relates to symptom severity

  • 30 women with PMDD were available for analyses (SPRM: n = 15, Table 1)

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Summary

ARTICLE OPEN

The present study sought to investigate the neural correlates of reactive aggression during the premenstrual phase in women with PMDD, randomized to a selective progesterone receptor modulator (SPRM) or placebo. The main aim was to explore whether SPRM treatment results in differential brain reactivity and functional connectivity during/in response to provocation, along with retaliatory behavior in the PSAP compared with placebo, and whether differential reactivity relates to symptom severity. Derived single-subject contrast maps were used in second level voxel-wise analyses to examine (i) task-related effects in the whole group, (ii) treatment group differences, (iii) interaction effects between treatment and task behavior, symptom severity, state aggression, hormone levels, and personality on BOLD reactivity, and (iv) the relationship between BOLD reactivity and the aforementioned variables in each group separately. As no significant functional connectivity was detected on the whole group level between neither of the two seed regions and distant voxels, differential functional connectivity patterns between the groups could not be assessed

RESULTS
Hormonal levels during treatment
DISCUSSION
SPRM Placebo
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Full Text
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