Amygdala Functional Connectivity and Negative Reactive Temperament at Age 4 Months - 19/08/21
, Sanjana Ravi, BS, BA a, Maya Bracy, BA a, Anderson Winkler, MD, PhD b, Chad M. Sylvester, MD, PhD c, Daniel S. Pine, MD b, Nathan A. Fox, PhD aAbstract |
Objective |
Infant amygdala connectivity correlates with maternal reports of infant temperament characterized by novelty-evoked distress and avoidance. However, no studies have examined how human infant amygdala connectivity relates to direct observations of novelty-evoked distress. This study examined the link between amygdala connectivity and infant novelty-evoked distress using direct observation of temperament.
Method |
Novelty-evoked distress was assessed at 4 months of age (N = 90) using a standardized reactivity assessment and parent report. Within 3 weeks of assessment, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging was collected in a subset of infants (n = 34). Using a whole-brain voxelwise approach, amygdala connectivity associated with positive and negative affect during the reactivity assessment was examined. Regions where the association of amygdala connectivity with negative affect was higher than with positive affect were then examined. Associations between amygdala connectivity and parent report of temperament were also examined.
Results |
Greater amygdala-cingulate and amygdala–superior frontal gyrus connectivity was associated with lower positive affect during the reactivity assessment. Further, the association between amygdala-cingulate connectivity was greater for negative affect compared with positive affect. There were no significant associations between latency to approach novelty (as measured by parent report) and amygdala connectivity. Validation analyses conducted using a large independent longitudinal sample (N = 323) demonstrated that negative reactivity was associated with increased child-reported anxiety symptoms in adolescence.
Conclusion |
These results provide novel insight into the developmental pathophysiology of novelty-evoked distress. This is consistent with research linking an altered cognitive control mechanism to temperamental risk for anxiety.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : amygdala, functional connectivity, infant MRI, negative reactivity, temperament
Plan
| This research was supported by Young Investigator Grant No. 28024 from the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation awarded to Dr. Filippi, a Maryland Neuroimaging Center Seed Grant (awarded to Dr. Fox), and NIMH grant U01MH093349 (awarded to Dr. Fox). Additional support for this project is provided through the Intramural Research Program of the NIMH through project ZIA-MH-002782 (Dr. Pine) and NIMH grants R01MH122389 (Dr. Sylvester) and K23MH109983 (Dr. Sylvester). |
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| Author Contributions |
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| Conceptualization: Filippi, Sylvester, Pine |
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| Data curation: Filippi, Ravi, Bracy |
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| Formal analysis: Filippi, Winkler |
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| Fundingacquisition: Filippi, Pine, Fox |
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| Investigation: Bracy, Winkler |
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| Methodology: Filippi, Ravi, Bracy, Winkler |
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| Project administration: Filippi, Ravi, Bracy, Pine, Fox |
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| Resources: Sylvester, Fox |
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| Software: Winkler |
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| Supervision: Winkler, Sylvester, Pine, Fox |
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| Validation: Filippi |
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| Visualization: Filippi, Winkler |
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| Writing – original draft: Filippi, Ravi, Bracy, Fox |
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| Writing – review and editing: Filippi, Ravi, Bracy, Winkler, Sylvester, Pine, Fox |
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| The authors would like to acknowledge the following individuals from the research team at the University of Maryland for their contributions to data collection: Emma Margolis, BS, Apongnwu Fopenawoh, BS, Gabby Suarez, BA, Stephanie Leach, BS, Keara Neuman, BS, and Abby Brustad, BA. |
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| Disclosure: Dr. Sylvester has received grant or research support from NIMH, the McDonnell Foundation, the Taylor Family Institute, the Parker Fund, and the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation. He has a patent in preparation for “Amygdala Precision Functional Mapping.” Drs. Filippi, Winkler, Pine, and Fox, and Mss. Ravi and Bracy have reported no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest. |
Vol 60 - N° 9
P. 1137-1146 - septembre 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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