Abstract

During depressive episode, bipolar disorder (BD) patients share indistinguishable depression symptoms with major depressive disorder (MDD).However, whether neural correlates underlying the anhedonia, a core feature of depression, is different between BD and MDD remains unknown. To explore neural correlates underlying the anhedonia in BD and MDD, structural T1-weighted images from 36 depressed BD patients, 40 depressed MDD patients matched for depression severity and 34 health controls (HCs) were scanned. Considering the vital role of nucleus accumbens (NAc) in the anhedonia, we constructed the structural covariance network of NAc for each subject. Then, we explored altered structural covariance network of NAc and its interaction with the anhedonia severity in BD and MDD patients. As a result, BD and MDD patients shared decreased structural covariance of NAc connected to prefrontal gyrus, bilateral striatum extending to bilateral anterior insula. Apart from these regions, BD patients presented specifically increased structural covariance of NAc connected to left hippocampus extending to thalamus. The interaction between structural covariance network of NAc and the anhedonia severity in MDD was mainly associated anterior insula (AIC), amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)and caudate while that in BD was mainly located in striatum and prefrontal cortex. Our results found that BD and MDD patients presented commonly and distinctly altered structural covariance network of NAc. What is more, the neural correlates underlying the anhedonia in BD and MDD might be different.

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