Abstract

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is one of the most effective treatments for depression. ECT induces volume changes in the amygdala, a key center of anxiety. However, the clinical relevance of ECT-induced changes in amygdala volume remains uncertain. We hypothesized that nuclei-specific amygdala volumes and anxiety symptoms in depression could explain the clinical correlates of ECT-induced volume changes. To test this hypothesis, we enrolled patients with depression who underwent ECT (N = 20) in this multicenter observational study and collected MRI data at three time points: before and after treatment and a 6-month follow-up. Patients who received medication (N = 52), cognitive behavioral therapy (N = 63), or transcranial magnetic stimulation (N = 20), and healthy participants (N = 147) were included for comparison. Amygdala nuclei were identified using FreeSurfer and clustered into three subdivisions to enhance reliability and interpretability. Anxiety symptoms were quantified using the anxiety factor scores derived from the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Before treatment, basolateral and basomedial subdivisions of the right amygdala were smaller than those of healthy controls. The volumes of the amygdala subdivisions increased after ECT and decreased during the follow-up period, but the volumes at 6-month follow-up were larger than those observed before treatment. These volume changes were specific to ECT. Long-term volume changes in the right basomedial amygdala correlated with improvements in anxiety symptoms. Baseline volumes in the right basolateral amygdala correlated with long-term improvements in anxiety symptoms. These findings demonstrate that clinical correlates of ECT-induced amygdala volume changes are existent, but in a nucleus and symptom-specific manner.

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