Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Depression: The Anatomy of Melancholia
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Medicine
- Vol. 49 (1) , 341-361
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.med.49.1.341
Abstract
Functional brain imaging techniques, which permit noninvasive measures of neurophysiology and neuroreceptor binding, are powerful and sensitive tools for research aimed at elucidating the pathophysiology of major depression. The application of these technologies in depression research has produced several studies of resting cerebral blood flow (BF) and glucose metabolism in subjects imaged during various phases of illness and treatment. This review examines these data and the principles relevant to their interpretation and discusses the insights they provide into the anatomical correlates of depression. Within the anatomical networks implicated in emotional processing by other types of evidence, these BF and metabolic data demonstrate that major depression is associated with reversible, mood state–dependent, neurophysiological abnormalities in some structures and irreversible, trait-like abnormalities in other structures. In some of the regions in which trait-like abnormalities appear, abnormal metabolic activity appears at least partly related to the anatomical abnormalities identified in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies of depression.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Subgenual prefrontal cortex abnormalities in mood disordersNature, 1997
- Cingulate function in depressionNeuroReport, 1997
- Metabolic rate in the amygdala predicts negative affect and depression severity in depressed patients: An FDG-PET studyNeuroImage, 1996
- Elevated frontal cerebral blood flow in Gilles de la Tourette syndrome: A 99Tcm-HMPAO SPECT studyPsychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 1992
- Positron Emission Tomographic Studies of the Processing of Singe WordsJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1989
- Circulatory and Metabolic Correlates of Brain Function in Normal HumansPublished by American Geophysical Union (AGU) ,1987
- Circuitry of Primate Prefrontal Cortex and Regulation of Behavior by Representational MemoryPublished by American Geophysical Union (AGU) ,1987
- The differential diagnosis of depression. Relevance of positron emission tomography studies of cerebral glucose metabolism to the bipolar-unipolar dichotomyJAMA, 1987
- Incidental subcortical lesions identified on magnetic resonance imaging in the elderly. II. Postmortem pathological correlations.Stroke, 1986
- TOMOGRAPHIC MAPPING OF HUMAN CEREBRAL METABOLISMJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1981