@phdthesis{Kopf2018, author = {Kopf, Juliane}, title = {Emotion processing and working memory deficits in Bipolar Disorder: interactions and changes from acute to remitted state}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-97752}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {BD is a severe and highly prevalent psychiatric illness characterized by oscillating mood episodes, where patients express either depressed mood, anhedonia, decreased activation along with concentration difficulties and sleep disturbances, or elevated mood with hyperactivity and loss of inhibitions. Between mood episodes, patients return to a relatively normal state of functioning without mood symptoms. Previous research on underlying neuronal mechanisms has led to a model of neuronal dysfunction in BD which states that BD arises from disruption in early development within brain networks that modulate emotional behavior. These abnormalities in the structure and function of key emotional control networks then lead to decreased connectivity among ventral prefrontal networks and limbic brain regions. This in turn creates a loss of emotional homeostasis, putting bipolar patients at risk for developing extreme mood states and switching among mood states. Two core components for BD have been identified, a hyperactive emotion processing system and a hypoactive cognitive functions system. It is controversial whether these deficits are still detectable in euthymia, so it is unclear if hyper- and hypoactivations represent state or trait-like characteristics. The aim of this study was to research both core components of BD with a paradigm eliciting differential activations in both cognitive and emotion processing networks. For this, an emotional word working memory paradigm was constructed to test for differences between manic, depressive, and remitted patients as well as a healthy control group. Differences were assessed in behavior, brain activation (as a correlate for the hypoactive cognitive functions system), measured with near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), and electrophysiological changes in the late positive potential (as a correlate for the hyperactive emotion processing system), an event-related potential (ERP) measured with electroencephalography. 47 patients in the acutely ill phase and 45 healthy controls were measured. Of the 47 patients, 18 returned to the clinic for a second testing while in remission for at least 3 months. Acutely ill patients were classified into 4 groups according to their disorder status: a mildly depressed group, a depressed group, a manic group, and a mixed group along DSM-IV criteria. Analyses were calculated for 3 load conditions (1-back, 2-back and 3-back) and 3 valence conditions (negative, neutral, positive) for behavioral measures reaction time and omission errors, for brain activation and event related potential changes. Results indicate that ill patients differed from controls in their behavioral performance, but the difference in performance was modulated by the mood state they were in. Depressed patients showed the most severe differences in all behavioral measures, while manic and mixed patients differed from controls only upon different valence conditions. Brain activation changes were most pronounced in mildly depressed and manic patients, depressed patients and mixed patients did not differ as much from controls. ERP changes showed a significant difference only between mixed patients and controls, where mixed patients had an overall much higher ERP amplitude. When remitted patients were compared to controls, no differences in behavior, brain activation or ERP amplitude could be found. However, the same was true for differences in patients between acutely ill and remitted state. When looking at the overall data, the following conclusion can be drawn: assuming that the brain activation seen in the prefrontal cortex is part of the dorsal cognitive system, then this is the predominantly disturbed system in depressed patients who show only small changes in the ERP. In contrast, the predominantly disturbed system in manic and mixed patients is the ventral emotion processing system, which can be seen in a hyper-activation of ERP related neural correlates in mixed and hypo-activated neural correlates of the LPP in manic patients. When patients are remitted, the cognitive system regains temporary stability, and can be compared to that of healthy controls, while the emotion processing system remains dysfunctional and underlies still detectable performance deficits.}, subject = {Manisch-depressive Krankheit}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{PompergebMueller2019, author = {Pomper [geb. M{\"u}ller], Laura Dorothea}, title = {Unterschiede in Frontaler Kortex Oxygenierung in zweierlei Risikogruppen der Alzheimer Demenz}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156757}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Die verbesserte medizinische Versorgung f{\"u}hrt zu einer zunehmenden Lebenserwartung unserer Gesellschaft. Damit steigt auch die sozio{\"o}konomische Relevanz neurodegenerativer Erkrankungen kontinuierlich. F{\"u}r die Alzheimer Demenz (AD), die dabei die h{\"a}ufigste Ursache darstellt, stehen bisher keine krankheitsmodifizierenden Behandlungsoptionen zur Verf{\"u}gung. Die lange pr{\"a}klinische Phase der Erkrankung birgt jedoch großes Potential f{\"u}r die Entwicklung neuer Behandlungsoptionen. Das Untersuchen von Risikogruppen ist f{\"u}r die Identifikation von Pr{\"a}diktoren einer sp{\"a}teren AD Manifestation von besonderem Interesse. In diesem Zusammenhang werden insbesondere das Vorliegen genetischer Risikokonstellationen, wie dem Apolipoprotein E (APOE) Ɛ4-Allel, sowie kognitiver Risikofaktoren, wie der „leichten kognitiven Beeintr{\"a}chtigung" (MCI), diskutiert. Die Identifikation pr{\"a}klinischer Aktivierungsunterschiede in relevanten Gehirnregionen von Risikogruppen kann als Basis f{\"u}r die Entwicklung neurofunktioneller Fr{\"u}herkennungs-Marker dienen. Der pr{\"a}frontale Kortex (PFC), welcher mit der Steuerung von Exekutivfunktionen assoziiert wird, hat sich in diesem Zusammenhang in bisherigen Studien als eine relevante Schl{\"u}sselregion manifestiert. Aufgrund der aufwendigen und kostenintensiven bildgebenden Untersuchungsmethoden, sind die genauen Prozesse jedoch noch unklar. Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es daher, Unterschiede in der PFC Oxygenierung in zweierlei Risikogruppen der AD mit einer kosteng{\"u}nstigeren Bildgebungsmethode, der funktionellen Nahinfrarot Spektroskopie (fNIRS), zu untersuchen. Daf{\"u}r wurde in einem ersten Schritt, der Trailmaking Test (TMT), ein weitverbreiteter neuropsychologischer Test zur Erfassung exekutiver Funktionen, f{\"u}r fNIRS implementiert. Als Grundlage f{\"u}r die Untersuchung fr{\"u}hpathologischer Prozesse, wurden zun{\"a}chst gesunde Alterungsprozesse betrachtet. Der Vergleich von jungen und {\"a}lteren Probanden (n = 20 pro Gruppe) wies neben der Eignung der Testimplementierung f{\"u}r fNIRS auf eine spezifische bilaterale PFC Oxygenierung hin, welche bei jungen Probanden rechtshemisph{\"a}risch lateralisiert war. {\"A}ltere Probanden hingegen zeigten bei vergleichbaren Verhaltensdaten insgesamt mehr signifikante Kan{\"a}le sowie eine Abnahme der Lateralisierung. Dies kann als zus{\"a}tzlicher Bedarf an Ressourcen in gesunden Alterungsprozessen interpretiert werden. Im Rahmen der Hauptstudie wurden anschließend insgesamt 604 {\"a}ltere Probanden im Alter von 70 bis 76 Jahren untersucht. Zun{\"a}chst wurde die genetische Risikogruppe der Ɛ4-Allel-Tr{\"a}ger (n = 78) mit den neutralen Ɛ3-Allel-Tr{\"a}gern (n = 216) und den Tr{\"a}gern des als protektiv geltenden Ɛ2-Allels (n = 50) verglichen. Hierbei zeigte sich eine geringere Oxygenierung der Risikogruppe bei geringer Aufgabenschwierigkeit, w{\"a}hrend sich ein erh{\"o}hter Oxygenierungsanstieg im medialen PFC mit steigender Aufgabenschwierigkeit zeigte. Dies deutet auf einen erh{\"o}hten Bedarf an neuronalen Kontrollmechanismen der Risikogruppe zur Bew{\"a}ltigung der steigenden Aufgabenschwierigkeit hin. Die protektive Gruppe zeigte hingegen eine erh{\"o}hte Oxygenierung im ventralen PFC mit steigender Aufgabenschwierigkeit, was m{\"o}glicherweise auf einen pr{\"a}ventiven Effekt hindeuten k{\"o}nnte. Weiterf{\"u}hrend wurden MCI-Patienten mit gesunden Probanden (n = 57 pro Gruppe) hinsichtlich des kognitiven Risikofaktors verglichen. Hierbei zeigte sich ein punktuell reduzierter Oxygenierunganstieg der MCI Patienten mit steigender Aufgabenschwierigkeit vor allem im ventralen PFC bei ebenfalls stabiler Verhaltensleistung. Die gefundene Reduktion k{\"o}nnte ein Zeichen f{\"u}r eine aufgebrauchte kognitive Reserve sein, welche Einbußen auf Verhaltensebene voranzugehen scheint. Diese charakteristischen Unterschiede in den frontalen Oxygenierungsmustern von Risikogruppen (APOE, MCI) k{\"o}nnten als Biomarker zur Fr{\"u}herkennung von AD noch vor dem Auftreten kognitiver Einbußen dienen. Die fNIRS-Untersuchung w{\"a}hrend der Durchf{\"u}hrung des TMT hat sich in diesem Zusammenhang als potentielles Instrument zur Fr{\"u}hdiagnose der pr{\"a}klinischen Phase der AD als geeignet erwiesen. Die Ergebnisse werden unter Einbezug des wissenschaftlichen Kontexts interpretiert und Implikationen f{\"u}r weitere notwendige Studien sowie die klinische Anwendbarkeit diskutiert.}, subject = {Alzheimerkrankheit}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Tupak2013, author = {Tupak, Sara}, title = {Modulators of Prefrontal Fear Network Function: An Integrative View}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-85673}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Regulating our immediate feelings, needs, and urges is a task that we are faced with every day in our lives. The effective regulation of our emotions enables us to adapt to society, to deal with our environment, and to achieve long-term goals. Deficient emotion regulation, in contrast, is a common characteristic of many psychiatric and neurological conditions. Particularly anxiety disorders and subclinical states of increased anxiety are characterized by a range of behavioral, autonomic, and neural alterations impeding the efficient down-regulation of acute fear. Established fear network models propose a downstream prefrontal-amygdala circuit for the control of fear reactions but recent research has shown that there are a range of factors acting on this network. The specific prefrontal cortical networks involved in effective regulation and potential mediators and modulators are still a subject of ongoing research in both the animal and human model. The present research focused on the particular role of different prefrontal cortical regions during the processing of fear-relevant stimuli in healthy subjects. It is based on four studies, three of them investigating a different potential modulator of prefrontal top-down function and one directly challenging prefrontal regulatory processes. Summarizing the results of all four studies, it was shown that prefrontal functioning is linked to individual differences in state anxiety, autonomic flexibility, and genetic predisposition. The T risk allele of the neuropeptide S receptor gene, a recently suggested candidate gene for pathologically elevated anxiety, for instance, was associated with decreased prefrontal cortex activation to particularly fear-relevant stimuli. Furthermore, the way of processing has been found to crucially determine if regulatory processes are engaged at all and it was shown that anxious individuals display generally reduced prefrontal activation but may engage in regulatory processes earlier than non-anxious subjects. However, active manipulation of prefrontal functioning in healthy subjects did not lead to the typical behavioral and neural patterns observed in anxiety disorder patients suggesting that other subcortical or prefrontal structures can compensate for an activation loss in one specific region. Taken together, the current studies support prevailing theories of the central role of the prefrontal cortex for regulatory processes in response to fear-eliciting stimuli but point out that there are a range of both individual differences and peculiarities in experimental design that impact on or may even mask potential effects in neuroimaging research on fear regulation.}, subject = {Neurogenetik}, language = {en} }