Support our work
Decorative header background

Altered inhibition-related frontolimbic connectivity in obsessive-compulsive disorder

Publication year 2015
Published in Human Brain Mapping
Authors Laura S van Velzen, Stella J de Wit, Branislava Ćurĉić-Blake, D.C. Cath, Froukje E de Vries, Dick J Veltman, Y.D. van der Werf, Odile A van den Heuvel

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have shown that response inhibition is impaired in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and their unaffected siblings, suggesting that these deficits may be considered a cognitive endophenotype of obsessive-compulsive disorder. Structural and functional neural correlates of altered response inhibition have been identified in patients and siblings. This study aims to examine the functional integrity of the response inhibition network in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and their unaffected siblings.

METHODS: Forty-one unmedicated patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder, 17 of their unaffected siblings and 37 healthy controls performed a stop signal task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Psycho-physiological interaction analysis was used to examine functional connectivity between the following regions of interest: the bilateral inferior frontal gyri, presupplementary motor area, subthalamic nuclei, inferior parietal lobes, anterior cingulate cortex, and amygdala. We then used dynamic causal modeling to investigate the directionality of the networks involved.

RESULTS: Patients, and to a lesser extent also their unaffected siblings, show altered connectivity between the inferior frontal gyrus and the amygdala during response inhibition. The follow-up dynamic causal modeling suggests a bottom-up influence of the amygdala on the inferior frontal gyrus in healthy controls, whereas processing occurs top-down in patients with obsessive-compulsive, and in both directions in siblings.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that amygdala activation in obsessive-compulsive disorder interferes differently with the task-related recruitment of the inhibition network, underscoring the role of limbic disturbances in cognitive dysfunctions in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Hum Brain Mapp 36:4064-4075, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Support our work!

The Friends Foundation facilitates groundbreaking brain research. You can help us with that.

Support our work