Abstract

Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) have been reported to show cognitive impairments in attention, cognition control, and motivation. The purpose of this study is to compare and examine the characteristics of frontal and temporal cortical activity in outpatients with MDD during the word production task (Shiritori) using a single event-related Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) measurement method that was originally devised. The subjects were 29 MDD patients and 29 age matched healthy controls. In this task, one session consisted of two contrasting conditions (word production task, control condition), and all subjects alternated between these conditions. Each word was visually presented by a monitor for 0.3 s as an activation task and a fixed circle was presented for 12 s. In the activation task, subjects had to immediately generate a noun that starts with the last syllable of the presented word and they were required to say only creatures. From the data obtained at each measurement point during the 20 trials, and averaged waveform during activation task (20 trials) was calculated for each channel. During the word production task, the MDD patients showed significantly smaller activation than the controls in the prefrontal cortex area and inferior parietal area, especially in the left area. In addition, there was a significant negative correlation between Δoxy-Hb at the bilateral temporal lobe area and HAM-D total score in the MDD patients. These findings suggest that a single event-related NIRS measurement during Japanese shiritori tasks may be useful tool for evaluating psychophysiological indices in MDD patients, that relationship between activation and symptom may be of help in predicting functional outcome in patients.

Highlights

  • Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) have been reported to show cognitive impairments in executive function, processing speed, attention, and memory [1]

  • We compared the hemodynamic changes of MDD patients and healthy subjects during the Shiritori task using the single event-related near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) measurement method

  • We investigated the relationship between the patient’s local cerebral blood flow and the HAM-D total score

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) have been reported to show cognitive impairments in executive function, processing speed, attention, and memory [1]. The definitive pathology of MDD remains unclear, advances in neuroimaging technology have gradually made it possible to identify affected brain regions and networks. Such techniques and methodologies have been proposed as biomarkers for a more reliable diagnosis of psychiatric disorders, including MDD. Under these circumstances, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been reported to be useful as a research tool for various psychiatric disorders including MDD [2, 3]. Near-infrared spectroscopy is a method of irradiating the head with near-infrared light absorbed by hemoglobin in the blood, measuring changes in cerebral blood flow in the cerebral cortex by the absorption rate, and indirectly measuring brain activity

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