Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental disorder causing great distress to individuals, families and even society, and there is not yet effective way of unified prevention and treatment up till now. Lots of neuroimaging techniques, however, such as the magnetic resonance imaging, are widely used to the study of the pathogenesis of PTSD with the development of medical imaging. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can be applied to detect the abnormalities not only of the brain morphology but also of the function of various cerebral areas and neural circuit, and plays an important role in studying the pathogenesis of psychiatric diseases. In this paper, we mainly review the task-related and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of the PTSD, and finally suggest possible directions for future research.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common neuro-developmental disorders occurring in childhood, characterized by symptoms of age-inappropriate inattention, hyperactivity/impulsivity, and the prevalence is higher in boys. Although gray matter volume deficits have been frequently reported for ADHD children via structural magnetic resonance imaging, few of them had specifically focused on male patients. The present study aimed to explore the alterations of gray matter volumes in medicated-naive boys with ADHD via a relatively new voxel-based morphometry technique. According to the criteria of DSM-IV-TR, 43 medicated-naive ADHD boys and 44 age-matched healthy boys were recruited. The magnetic resonance image (MRI) scan was performed via a 3T MRI system with three-dimensional (3D) spoiled gradient recalled echo (SPGR) sequence. Voxel-based morphometry with diffeomorphic anatomical registration through exponentiated lie algebra in SPM8 was used to preprocess the 3D T1-weighted images. To identify gray matter volume differences between the ADHD and the controls, voxel-based analysis of whole brain gray matter volumes between two groups were done via two sample t-test in SPM8 with age as covariate, threshold at P<0.001. Finally, compared to the controls, significantly reduced gray matter volumes were identified in the right orbitofrontal cortex (peak coordinates [-2,52,-25], t=4.01), and bilateral hippocampus (Left: peak coordinates [14,0,-18], t=3.61; Right: peak coordinates [-14,15,-28], t=3.64) of ADHD boys. Our results demonstrated obvious reduction of whole brain gray matter volumes in right orbitofrontal cortex and bilateral hippocampus in boys with ADHD. This suggests that the abnormalities of prefrontal-hippocam-pus circuit may be the underlying cause of the cognitive dysfunction and abnormal behavioral inhibition in medicated-naive boys with ADHD.
ObjectiveTo study the relationship between brain white matter fiber occult lesions and P100 wave latency of visual evoked potential (VEP) in neuromyelitis optica (NMO) patients by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). MethodsTwenty patients with NMO who were treated between July 2008 and April 2009 were selected as the trial group. According to the VEP test, the latency of P100 wave was prolonged, the NMO patients were divided into VEP abnormal group (trial group 1) and VEP normal group (trial group 2). Twenty healthy adult volunteers served as the control group. The DTI examination in brain was done to measure the fractional anisotropy (FA) value of optic nerve (FAn), optic tract (FAt), and optic radiation (FAr);and the mean diffusivity (MD) value of optic nerve (MDn), optic tract (MDt), and optic radiation (MDr). The FA, MD, and P100 wave latency were compared between groups, and the correlation between MD, FA, and P100 wave latency of NMO were analyzed. ResultsIn the 20 NMO patients, 13 patients with VEP had prolonged bilateral P100 wave latency prolongation or no wave (trial group 1), and 7 patients had normal bilateral P100 wave latency (trial group 2). Compared with the trial group 2 and the control group, the FA values were significantly decreased, and the MD values were significantly increased in the trial group 1 (P<0.05). There was no significant difference in the FA and MD values between the trial group 2 and the control group (P>0.05). All FA (FAn, FAt, and FAr) values of each part of NMO patients were negatively correlated with the latency of P100 wave (P<0.05), all MD (MDn, MDt, and MDr) values were positively correlated with the latency of P100 wave (P<0.05). ConclusionDTI could show small pathylogical changes in the white matter fibers of visual pathway, and there is a correlation between DTI and VEP in NMO, suggesting that a more comprehensive assessment to the condition and prognosis can be made through the VEP in the clinical indicators.
ObjectiveSeizure-related respiratory or cardiac dysfunction was once thought to be the direct cause of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), but both may be secondary to postictal cerebral inhibition. An important issue that has not been explored to date is the neural network basis of cerebral inhibition. Our aim was to investigate the features of neural networks in patients at high risk for SUDEP using a blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) resting-state functional MRI (Rs-fMRI) technique. MethodsRs-fMRI data were recorded from 13 patients at high risk for SUDEP and 12 patients at low risk for SUDEP. The amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) values were compared between the two groups to decipt the regional brain activities. ResultsCompared with patients at low risk for SUDEP, patients at high risk exhibited significant ALFF reductions in the right superior frontal gyrus, the left superior orbital frontal gyrus, the left insula and the left thalamus; and ALFF increase in the right middle cigulum gyrus, the right supplementary motor area and the left thalamus. ConclusionsThese findings highlight the need to understand the fundamental neural network dysfunction in SUDEP, which may fill the missing link between seizure-related cardiorespiratory dysfunction and SUDEP, and provide a promising neuroimaging biomarker for risk prediction of SUDEP.