Acute neural effects of fluoxetine on emotional regulation in depressed adolescents
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Date
2022-05Author
Capitao, Liliana
Chapman, Robert
Wright, Lucy C
Murphy, Susannah E
James, Anthony
Cowen, Philip J
Harmer, Catherine J
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Capitão, L., Chapman, R., Filippini, N., Wright, L., Murphy, S., James, A., Cowen P., Harmer, C. (2022). Acute neural effects of fluoxetine on emotional regulation in depressed adolescents. Psychological Medicine, 1-12.
Abstract
Adolescent major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with disrupted processing of emotional stimuli and difficulties in cognitive reappraisal. Little is known however about how current pharmacotherapies act to modulate the neural mechanisms underlying these key processes. The current study therefore investigated the neural effects of fluoxetine on emotional reactivity and cognitive reappraisal in adolescent depression.
Methods
Thirty-one adolescents with MDD were randomised to acute fluoxetine (10 mg) or placebo. Seventeen healthy adolescents were also recruited but did not receive any treatment for ethical reasons. During functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), participants viewed aversive images and were asked to either experience naturally the emotional state elicited (‘Maintain’) or to reinterpret the content of the pictures to reduce negative affect (‘Reappraise’). Significant activations were identified using whole-brain analysis.
Results
No significant group differences were seen when comparing Reappraise and Maintain conditions. However, when compared to healthy controls, depressed adolescents on placebo showed reduced visual activation to aversive pictures irrespective of the condition. The depressed adolescent group on fluoxetine showed the opposite pattern, i.e. increased visuo-cerebellar activity in response to aversive pictures, when compared to depressed adolescents on placebo.
Conclusions
These data suggest that depression in adolescence may be associated with reduced visual processing of aversive imagery and that fluoxetine may act to reduce avoidance of such cues. This could reflect a key mechanism whereby depressed adolescents engage with negative cues previously avoided. Future research combining fMRI with eye-tracking is nonetheless needed to further clarify these effects.
Description
Open Access
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- Depressive Disorders [111]