1 research outputs found
Interoception in insula subregions as a possible state marker for depression - an exploratory fMRI study investigating healthy, depressed and remitted participants
Background: Interoceptive awareness (iA), the awareness of stimuli originating
inside the body, plays an important role in human emotions and
psychopathology. The insula is particularly involved in neural processes
underlying iA. However, iA-related neural activity in the insula during the
acute state of major depressive disorder (MDD) and in remission from
depression has not been explored. Methods: A well-established fMRI paradigm
for studying (iA; heartbeat counting) and exteroceptive awareness (eA; tone
counting) was used. Study participants formed three independent groups:
patients suffering from MDD, patients in remission from MDD or healthy
controls. Task-induced neural activity in three functional subdivisions of the
insula was compared between these groups. Results: Depressed participants
showed neural hypo-responses during iA in anterior insula regions, as compared
to both healthy and remitted participants. The right dorsal anterior insula
showed the strongest response to iA across all participant groups. In
depressed participants there was no differentiation between different stimuli
types in this region (i.e., between iA, eA and noTask). Healthy and remitted
participants in contrast showed clear activity differences. Conclusions: This
is the first study comparing iA and eA-related activity in the insula in
depressed participants to that in healthy and remitted individuals. The
preliminary results suggest that these groups differ in there being hypo-
responses across insula regions in the depressed participants, whilst non-
psychiatric participants and patients in remission from MDD show the same
neural activity during iA in insula subregions implying a possible state
marker for MDD. The lack of activity differences between different stimulus
types in the depressed group may account for their symptoms of altered
external and internal focus