Quantitative MRI at 7-Tesla reveals novel frontocortical myeloarchitecture anomalies in major depressive disorder.
Jurjen HeijWietske van der ZwaagTomas KnapenMatthan W A CaanBirte ForstmanDick J VeltmanGuido van WingenMoji AghajaniPublished in: Translational psychiatry (2024)
Whereas meta-analytical data highlight abnormal frontocortical macrostructure (thickness/surface area/volume) in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), the underlying microstructural processes remain uncharted, due to the use of conventional MRI scanners and acquisition techniques. We uniquely combined Ultra-High Field MRI at 7.0 Tesla with Quantitative Imaging to map intracortical myelin (proxied by longitudinal relaxation time T 1 ) and iron concentration (proxied by transverse relaxation time T 2 *), microstructural processes deemed particularly germane to cortical macrostructure. Informed by meta-analytical evidence, we focused specifically on orbitofrontal and rostral anterior cingulate cortices among adult MDD patients (N = 48) and matched healthy controls (HC; N = 10). Analyses probed the association of MDD diagnosis and clinical profile (severity, medication use, comorbid anxiety disorders, childhood trauma) with aforementioned microstructural properties. MDD diagnosis (p's < 0.05, Cohen's D = 0.55-0.66) and symptom severity (p's < 0.01, r = 0.271-0.267) both related to decreased intracortical myelination (higher T 1 values) within the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, a region tightly coupled to processing negative affect and feelings of sadness in MDD. No relations were found with local iron concentrations. These findings allow uniquely fine-grained insights on frontocortical microstructure in MDD, and cautiously point to intracortical demyelination as a possible driver of macroscale cortical disintegrity in MDD.
Keyphrases
- major depressive disorder
- bipolar disorder
- white matter
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- end stage renal disease
- magnetic resonance
- ejection fraction
- diffusion weighted imaging
- functional connectivity
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- optical coherence tomography
- cross sectional
- mass spectrometry
- computed tomography
- young adults
- minimally invasive
- molecular dynamics
- big data
- fluorescence imaging