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Reduced Brain Electric Activity and Functional Connectivity in Bipolar Euthymia: An sLORETA Source Localization Study

Authors :
Annamaria Painold
Anna K. Holl
Gerda M. Saletu-Zyhlarz
Armin Birner
Pascal L. Faber
Hans-Peter Kapfhammer
Sabrina Mörkl
Patricia Milz
Peter Anderer
Bernd Saletu
Peter Achermann
Susanne Bengesser
Nina Dalkner
Eva Z. Reininghaus
University of Zurich
Reininghaus, Eva Z
Source :
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience. 51:155-166
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2019.

Abstract

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic illness with a relapsing and remitting time course. Relapses are manic or depressive in nature and intermitted by euthymic states. During euthymic states, patients lack the criteria for a manic or depressive diagnosis, but still suffer from impaired cognitive functioning as indicated by difficulties in executive and language-related processing. The present study investigated whether these deficits are reflected by altered intracortical activity in or functional connectivity between brain regions involved in these processes such as the prefrontal and the temporal cortices. Vigilance-controlled resting state EEG of 13 euthymic BD patients and 13 healthy age- and sex-matched controls was analyzed. Head-surface EEG was recomputed into intracortical current density values in 8 frequency bands using standardized low-resolution electromagnetic tomography. Intracortical current densities were averaged in 19 evenly distributed regions of interest (ROIs). Lagged coherences were computed between each pair of ROIs. Source activity and coherence measures between patients and controls were compared (paired t tests). Reductions in temporal cortex activity and in large-scale functional connectivity in patients compared to controls were observed. Activity reductions affected all 8 EEG frequency bands. Functional connectivity reductions affected the delta, theta, alpha-2, beta-2, and gamma band and involved but were not limited to prefrontal and temporal ROIs. The findings show reduced activation of the temporal cortex and reduced coordination between many brain regions in BD euthymia. These activation and connectivity changes may disturb the continuous frontotemporal information flow required for executive and language-related processing, which is impaired in euthymic BD patients.

Details

ISSN :
21695202 and 15500594
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d4ae59abbe2d2fd5c97c638f1ec3f79d