Shane McKie | The University of Manchester (original) (raw)

Papers by Shane McKie

Research paper thumbnail of The effects of disease activity on neuronal and behavioural cognitive processes in systemic lupus erythematosus

Rheumatology

Objectives Factors common across many chronic diseases, such as fatigue and depression affect cog... more Objectives Factors common across many chronic diseases, such as fatigue and depression affect cognitive dysfunction (CD) but the effect of SLE disease activity on CD remains unclear. We aimed to explore the effects of disease activity in SLE on cognitive function whilst taking into consideration other potential mediators. Methods Two groups of SLE patients were recruited; stable/low disease activity (SLE-S, n = 36) and active disease (SLE-F, n = 26). The SLE-F group were studied during a flare; with a second visit when disease activity had reduced. In addition to demographic, clinical and psychiatric data, CD was measured using a computerised battery of tests (CANTAB®). Functional MRI (fMRI) was used to examine neuronal responses to working memory and emotional processing tasks. Results No differences between the groups/visits were found using the CANTAB® battery. The fMRI results showed that the SLE-F group had a less attenuated response in the medial prefrontal cortex (a default m...

Research paper thumbnail of Spatiotemporal brain activation pattern following acute citalopram challenge is dose dependent and associated with neuroticism: A human phMRI study

Neuropharmacology

BACKGROUND The initial effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the human li... more BACKGROUND The initial effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the human living brain are poorly understood. We carried out a 3T resting state fMRI study with pharmacological challenge to determine the brain activation changes over time following different dosages of citalopram. METHODS During the study, 7.5 mg i.v. citalopram was administered to 32 healthy subjects. In addition, 11.25 mg citalopram was administered to a subset of 9 subjects to investigate the dose-response. Associations with neuroticism (assessed by the NEO PI-R) of the emerging brain activation to citalopram was also investigated. RESULTS Citalopram challenge evoked significant activation in brain regions that are part of the default mode network, the visual network and the sensorimotor network, extending to the thalamus, and midbrain. Most effects appeared to be dose-dependent and this was statistically significant in the middle cingulate gyrus. Individual citalopram-induced brain responses were positively correlated with neuroticism scores and its subscales in specific brain areas; anxiety subscale scores in thalamus and midbrain and self-consciousness scores in middle cingulate gyrus. There were no sex differences. LIMITATIONS We investigated only healthy subjects and we used a relatively low sample size in the 11.25 mg citalopram analysis. DISCUSSION Our results suggest that SSRIs acutely induce an increased arousal-like state of distributed cortical and subcortical systems that is mediated by enhanced serotonin neurotransmission according to levels of neuroticism and underpins trait sensitivity to environmental stimuli and stressors. Studies in depression are needed to determine how therapeutic effects eventually emerge.

Research paper thumbnail of Human brain responses to gastrointestinal nutrients and gut hormones

Current opinion in pharmacology, Dec 27, 2016

Functional mapping of human brain activation has made it possible to understand how different nut... more Functional mapping of human brain activation has made it possible to understand how different nutrients in the gut impact on homeostatic and appetitive brain responses. Current data are limited, but nutrient-specific effects are observed, with differential responses to lipid and sugars. Responses are not a simple function of calorie intake. Gut hormones such as CCK, PYY, GLP-1 and ghrelin are implicated in these responses, but may not exert effects directly on the brain. Research is now addressing how these homeostatic signalling states (fasting/fed) interact with hedonic responses, such as those evoked by images of appealing food. Differences are also beginning to emerge in obese versus lean subjects. These platforms will enable a new understanding of normal and disordered eating behaviours in humans.

Research paper thumbnail of Comparing the actions of lanicemine and ketamine in depression: key role of the anterior cingulate

European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Jun 28, 2016

Intravenous infusion of lanicemine (formerly AZD6765), a low trapping non-selective N-methyl-D-as... more Intravenous infusion of lanicemine (formerly AZD6765), a low trapping non-selective N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, induces antidepressant effects with a similar time course to ketamine. We investigated whether a single dose lanicemine infusion would reproduce the previously reported decrease in subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) activity evoked by ketamine, a potential mechanism of antidepressant efficacy. Sixty un-medicated adults meeting the criteria for major depressive disorder were randomly assigned to receive constant intravenous infusions of ketamine, lanicemine or saline during a 60min pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) scan. Both ketamine and lanicemine gradually increased the blood oxygen level dependent signal in sgACC and rostral ACC as the primary outcome measure. No decreases in signal were seen in any region. Interviewer-rated psychotic and dissociative symptoms were minimal following administration of lanicemine. There was n...

Research paper thumbnail of Sample size estimation for comparing parameters using dynamic causal modeling

Brain connectivity, 2012

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has proved to be useful for analyzing the effects of... more Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has proved to be useful for analyzing the effects of illness and pharmacological agents on brain activation. Many fMRI studies now incorporate effective connectivity analyses on data to assess the networks recruited during task performance. The assessment of the sample size that is necessary for carrying out such calculations would be useful if these techniques are to be confidently applied. Here, we present a method of estimating the sample size that is required for a study to have sufficient power. Our approach uses Bayesian Model Selection to find a best fitting model and then uses a bootstrapping technique to provide an estimate of the parameter variance. As illustrative examples, we apply this technique to two different tasks and show that for our data, ~20 volunteers per group is sufficient. Due to variability between task, volunteers, scanner, and acquisition parameters, this would need to be evaluated on individual datasets. This ...

Research paper thumbnail of Neural correlates of choice behavior related to impulsivity and venturesomeness

Research paper thumbnail of Analysis of connectivity in the resting state of the default mode of brain function: a major role for the cerebellum?

International Journal of Modelling, Identification and Control, 2010

236 Int. J. Modelling, Identification and Control, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2010 ... Analysis of connectivi... more 236 Int. J. Modelling, Identification and Control, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2010 ... Analysis of connectivity in the resting state of the default mode of brain function: a major role for the cerebellum? ... Imaging Science and Biomedical Engineering, University of Manchester, Stopford Building, Oxford ...

Research paper thumbnail of Functional neuroimaging demonstrates that ghrelin inhibits the central nervous system response to ingested lipid

Research paper thumbnail of The Neuro/PsyGRID calibration experiment: identifying sources of variance and bias in multicenter MRI studies

Human brain mapping, 2012

Calibration experiments precede multicenter trials to identify potential sources of variance and ... more Calibration experiments precede multicenter trials to identify potential sources of variance and bias. In support of future imaging studies of mental health disorders and their treatment, the Neuro/PsyGRID consortium commissioned a calibration experiment to acquire functional and structural MRI from twelve healthy volunteers attending five centers on two occasions. Measures were derived of task activation from a working memory paradigm, fractal scaling (Hurst exponent) from resting fMRI, and grey matter distributions from T(1) -weighted sequences. At each intracerebral voxel a fixed-effects analysis of variance estimated components of variance corresponding to factors of center, subject, occasion, and within-occasion order, and interactions of center-by-occasion, subject-by-occasion, and center-by-subject, the latter (since there is no intervention) a surrogate of the expected variance of the treatment effect standard error across centers. A rank order test of between-center differe...

Research paper thumbnail of Effects of Patellar Taping on Brain Activity During Knee Joint Proprioception Tests Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Physical therapy, 2012

BackgroundPatella taping is a common treatment modality for physical therapists treating patellof... more BackgroundPatella taping is a common treatment modality for physical therapists treating patellofemoral pain. However, the mechanisms of action remain unclear, with much debate as to whether its efficacy is due to a change in patellar alignment or an alteration in sensory input.ObjectiveTo investigate the sensory input hypothesis using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) when taping was applied to the knee joint during a proprioception task.DesignAn observational study with patellar taping intervention.Participants and METHODS:/st>Eight healthy, right leg dominant male volunteers participated in a motor block design study. Each performed two right knee extension repetitive movement tasks; one simple and one proprioceptive. These tasks were performed with and without patellar taping and were auditorally paced for 400 s at 72 beats/min (1.2 Hz). RESULTS: /st>The proprioception task without patellar tape caused a positive Blood Oxygenation Level Dependant (BOLD) response...

Research paper thumbnail of Defining the Role of Cholecystokinin in the Lipid-Induced Human Brain Activation Matrix

Research paper thumbnail of 5-HT2C antagonism blocks blood oxygen level-dependent pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging signal in rat brain areas related to feeding

European Journal of Neuroscience, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Multivariate and repeated measures (MRM): A new toolbox for dependent and multimodal group-level neuroimaging data

NeuroImage, May 24, 2016

Repeated measurements and multimodal data are common in neuroimaging research. Despite this, conv... more Repeated measurements and multimodal data are common in neuroimaging research. Despite this, conventional approaches to group level analysis ignore these repeated measurements in favour of multiple between-subject models using contrasts of interest. This approach has a number of drawbacks as certain designs and comparisons of interest are either not possible or complex to implement. Unfortunately, even when attempting to analyse group level data within a repeated-measures framework the methods implemented in popular software packages make potentially unrealistic assumptions about the covariance structure across the brain. In this paper, we describe how this issue can be addressed in a simple and efficient manner using the multivariate form of the familiar general linear model (GLM), as implemented in a new MATLAB toolbox. This multivariate framework is discussed, paying particular attention to methods of inference by permutation. Comparisons with existing approaches and software pac...

Research paper thumbnail of Changes in the neural correlates of self-blame following mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in remitted depressed participants

Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging , 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Differential Effects of Anaesthesia on the phMRI Response to Acute Ketamine Challenge

British journal of medicine and medical research, 2012

AIMS: Pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) is powerful new tool enabling ... more AIMS: Pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) is powerful new tool enabling researchers to map the central effects of neuroactive drugs in vivo. To employ this technique pre-clinically, head movements and the stress of restraint are usually reduced by maintaining animals under general anaesthesia. However, interactions between the drug of interest and the anaesthetic employed may potentially confound data interpretation. NMDA receptor (NMDAR) antagonists used widely to mimic schizophrenia have recently been shown to interact with the anaesthetic halothane. It may be the case that neural and cerebrovascular responses to NMDAR antagonists are dependent on the types of anaesthetic used. METHODOLOGY: We compared the phMRI response to NMDAR antagonist ketamine in rats maintained under α-chloralose to those under isoflurane anaesthesia. A randomized placebo/vehicle controlled design was used in each of the anaesthetic groups. RESULTS: Changes in the anaesthetic agent ...

Research paper thumbnail of TOMM40 rs2075650 May Represent a New Candidate Gene for Vulnerability to Major Depressive Disorder

Neuropsychopharmacology, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Interaction between a history of depression and rumination on neural response to emotional faces

Psychological medicine, 2011

Both past depressive episodes and the personality trait of depressive rumination are strong risk ... more Both past depressive episodes and the personality trait of depressive rumination are strong risk factors for future depression. Depression is associated with abnormal emotional processing, which may be a neurobiological marker for vulnerability to depression. A consistent picture has yet to emerge as to how a history of depression and the tendency to ruminate influence emotional processing. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between rumination, past depression and neural responses when processing face emotions.

Research paper thumbnail of A Single-Case fMRI Study<BR> EMDR Treatment of a Patient With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

Journal of EMDR Practice and Research, 2009

ABSTRACT This study assessed the effects of a session of eye movement desensitization and reproce... more ABSTRACT This study assessed the effects of a session of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) with auditory alternating bilateral stimulation (ABS) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of brain activations. A case study was conducted with a female participant who was suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder following a severe assault. The fMRI scan began with safe-place imagery, for purposes of comparison, and then attention to the trauma memory without ABS. After this, ABS was provided as she began using EMDR procedures to process the traumatic memory. At postsession, the traumatic memory showed robust and significant changes on self-report measures. The initiation of the EMDR protocol with provision of ABS was associated with a marked change in brain activation within the prefrontal cortex demonstrating a ventromedial shift. The authors argue that the structure of the EMDR protocol encourages such a ventromedial activation, which is then intensified by ABS to overcome the block to information processing that has been preventing natural healing from occurring spontaneously.

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of citalopram pretreatment on neuronal responses to neuropsychological tasks in normal volunteers: an FMRI study

Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 2005

Changes in serotonin neurotransmission have also been implicated in the etiology and treatment of... more Changes in serotonin neurotransmission have also been implicated in the etiology and treatment of impulse control disorders, depression, and anxiety. We have investigated the effect of enhancing serotonin function on fundamental brain processes that we have proposed are abnormal in these disorders. In all, 12 male volunteers received citalopram (7.5 mg intravenously) and placebo pretreatment in a single-blind crossover design before undertaking Go/No-go, Loss/No-loss, and covert (aversive) face emotion recognition tasks during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Blood oxygenation level dependent responses were analyzed using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM2). The tasks activated prefrontal and subcortical regions generally consistent with literature with lateral orbitofrontal cortex (BA47) common to the three tasks. Citalopram pretreatment enhanced the right BA47 responses to the No-go condition, but attenuated this response to aversive faces. Attenuations were seen fo...

Research paper thumbnail of Neural responses to sad facial expressions in current versus remitted major depression

Research paper thumbnail of The effects of disease activity on neuronal and behavioural cognitive processes in systemic lupus erythematosus

Rheumatology

Objectives Factors common across many chronic diseases, such as fatigue and depression affect cog... more Objectives Factors common across many chronic diseases, such as fatigue and depression affect cognitive dysfunction (CD) but the effect of SLE disease activity on CD remains unclear. We aimed to explore the effects of disease activity in SLE on cognitive function whilst taking into consideration other potential mediators. Methods Two groups of SLE patients were recruited; stable/low disease activity (SLE-S, n = 36) and active disease (SLE-F, n = 26). The SLE-F group were studied during a flare; with a second visit when disease activity had reduced. In addition to demographic, clinical and psychiatric data, CD was measured using a computerised battery of tests (CANTAB®). Functional MRI (fMRI) was used to examine neuronal responses to working memory and emotional processing tasks. Results No differences between the groups/visits were found using the CANTAB® battery. The fMRI results showed that the SLE-F group had a less attenuated response in the medial prefrontal cortex (a default m...

Research paper thumbnail of Spatiotemporal brain activation pattern following acute citalopram challenge is dose dependent and associated with neuroticism: A human phMRI study

Neuropharmacology

BACKGROUND The initial effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the human li... more BACKGROUND The initial effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the human living brain are poorly understood. We carried out a 3T resting state fMRI study with pharmacological challenge to determine the brain activation changes over time following different dosages of citalopram. METHODS During the study, 7.5 mg i.v. citalopram was administered to 32 healthy subjects. In addition, 11.25 mg citalopram was administered to a subset of 9 subjects to investigate the dose-response. Associations with neuroticism (assessed by the NEO PI-R) of the emerging brain activation to citalopram was also investigated. RESULTS Citalopram challenge evoked significant activation in brain regions that are part of the default mode network, the visual network and the sensorimotor network, extending to the thalamus, and midbrain. Most effects appeared to be dose-dependent and this was statistically significant in the middle cingulate gyrus. Individual citalopram-induced brain responses were positively correlated with neuroticism scores and its subscales in specific brain areas; anxiety subscale scores in thalamus and midbrain and self-consciousness scores in middle cingulate gyrus. There were no sex differences. LIMITATIONS We investigated only healthy subjects and we used a relatively low sample size in the 11.25 mg citalopram analysis. DISCUSSION Our results suggest that SSRIs acutely induce an increased arousal-like state of distributed cortical and subcortical systems that is mediated by enhanced serotonin neurotransmission according to levels of neuroticism and underpins trait sensitivity to environmental stimuli and stressors. Studies in depression are needed to determine how therapeutic effects eventually emerge.

Research paper thumbnail of Human brain responses to gastrointestinal nutrients and gut hormones

Current opinion in pharmacology, Dec 27, 2016

Functional mapping of human brain activation has made it possible to understand how different nut... more Functional mapping of human brain activation has made it possible to understand how different nutrients in the gut impact on homeostatic and appetitive brain responses. Current data are limited, but nutrient-specific effects are observed, with differential responses to lipid and sugars. Responses are not a simple function of calorie intake. Gut hormones such as CCK, PYY, GLP-1 and ghrelin are implicated in these responses, but may not exert effects directly on the brain. Research is now addressing how these homeostatic signalling states (fasting/fed) interact with hedonic responses, such as those evoked by images of appealing food. Differences are also beginning to emerge in obese versus lean subjects. These platforms will enable a new understanding of normal and disordered eating behaviours in humans.

Research paper thumbnail of Comparing the actions of lanicemine and ketamine in depression: key role of the anterior cingulate

European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Jun 28, 2016

Intravenous infusion of lanicemine (formerly AZD6765), a low trapping non-selective N-methyl-D-as... more Intravenous infusion of lanicemine (formerly AZD6765), a low trapping non-selective N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, induces antidepressant effects with a similar time course to ketamine. We investigated whether a single dose lanicemine infusion would reproduce the previously reported decrease in subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) activity evoked by ketamine, a potential mechanism of antidepressant efficacy. Sixty un-medicated adults meeting the criteria for major depressive disorder were randomly assigned to receive constant intravenous infusions of ketamine, lanicemine or saline during a 60min pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) scan. Both ketamine and lanicemine gradually increased the blood oxygen level dependent signal in sgACC and rostral ACC as the primary outcome measure. No decreases in signal were seen in any region. Interviewer-rated psychotic and dissociative symptoms were minimal following administration of lanicemine. There was n...

Research paper thumbnail of Sample size estimation for comparing parameters using dynamic causal modeling

Brain connectivity, 2012

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has proved to be useful for analyzing the effects of... more Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has proved to be useful for analyzing the effects of illness and pharmacological agents on brain activation. Many fMRI studies now incorporate effective connectivity analyses on data to assess the networks recruited during task performance. The assessment of the sample size that is necessary for carrying out such calculations would be useful if these techniques are to be confidently applied. Here, we present a method of estimating the sample size that is required for a study to have sufficient power. Our approach uses Bayesian Model Selection to find a best fitting model and then uses a bootstrapping technique to provide an estimate of the parameter variance. As illustrative examples, we apply this technique to two different tasks and show that for our data, ~20 volunteers per group is sufficient. Due to variability between task, volunteers, scanner, and acquisition parameters, this would need to be evaluated on individual datasets. This ...

Research paper thumbnail of Neural correlates of choice behavior related to impulsivity and venturesomeness

Research paper thumbnail of Analysis of connectivity in the resting state of the default mode of brain function: a major role for the cerebellum?

International Journal of Modelling, Identification and Control, 2010

236 Int. J. Modelling, Identification and Control, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2010 ... Analysis of connectivi... more 236 Int. J. Modelling, Identification and Control, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2010 ... Analysis of connectivity in the resting state of the default mode of brain function: a major role for the cerebellum? ... Imaging Science and Biomedical Engineering, University of Manchester, Stopford Building, Oxford ...

Research paper thumbnail of Functional neuroimaging demonstrates that ghrelin inhibits the central nervous system response to ingested lipid

Research paper thumbnail of The Neuro/PsyGRID calibration experiment: identifying sources of variance and bias in multicenter MRI studies

Human brain mapping, 2012

Calibration experiments precede multicenter trials to identify potential sources of variance and ... more Calibration experiments precede multicenter trials to identify potential sources of variance and bias. In support of future imaging studies of mental health disorders and their treatment, the Neuro/PsyGRID consortium commissioned a calibration experiment to acquire functional and structural MRI from twelve healthy volunteers attending five centers on two occasions. Measures were derived of task activation from a working memory paradigm, fractal scaling (Hurst exponent) from resting fMRI, and grey matter distributions from T(1) -weighted sequences. At each intracerebral voxel a fixed-effects analysis of variance estimated components of variance corresponding to factors of center, subject, occasion, and within-occasion order, and interactions of center-by-occasion, subject-by-occasion, and center-by-subject, the latter (since there is no intervention) a surrogate of the expected variance of the treatment effect standard error across centers. A rank order test of between-center differe...

Research paper thumbnail of Effects of Patellar Taping on Brain Activity During Knee Joint Proprioception Tests Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Physical therapy, 2012

BackgroundPatella taping is a common treatment modality for physical therapists treating patellof... more BackgroundPatella taping is a common treatment modality for physical therapists treating patellofemoral pain. However, the mechanisms of action remain unclear, with much debate as to whether its efficacy is due to a change in patellar alignment or an alteration in sensory input.ObjectiveTo investigate the sensory input hypothesis using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) when taping was applied to the knee joint during a proprioception task.DesignAn observational study with patellar taping intervention.Participants and METHODS:/st>Eight healthy, right leg dominant male volunteers participated in a motor block design study. Each performed two right knee extension repetitive movement tasks; one simple and one proprioceptive. These tasks were performed with and without patellar taping and were auditorally paced for 400 s at 72 beats/min (1.2 Hz). RESULTS: /st>The proprioception task without patellar tape caused a positive Blood Oxygenation Level Dependant (BOLD) response...

Research paper thumbnail of Defining the Role of Cholecystokinin in the Lipid-Induced Human Brain Activation Matrix

Research paper thumbnail of 5-HT2C antagonism blocks blood oxygen level-dependent pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging signal in rat brain areas related to feeding

European Journal of Neuroscience, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of Multivariate and repeated measures (MRM): A new toolbox for dependent and multimodal group-level neuroimaging data

NeuroImage, May 24, 2016

Repeated measurements and multimodal data are common in neuroimaging research. Despite this, conv... more Repeated measurements and multimodal data are common in neuroimaging research. Despite this, conventional approaches to group level analysis ignore these repeated measurements in favour of multiple between-subject models using contrasts of interest. This approach has a number of drawbacks as certain designs and comparisons of interest are either not possible or complex to implement. Unfortunately, even when attempting to analyse group level data within a repeated-measures framework the methods implemented in popular software packages make potentially unrealistic assumptions about the covariance structure across the brain. In this paper, we describe how this issue can be addressed in a simple and efficient manner using the multivariate form of the familiar general linear model (GLM), as implemented in a new MATLAB toolbox. This multivariate framework is discussed, paying particular attention to methods of inference by permutation. Comparisons with existing approaches and software pac...

Research paper thumbnail of Changes in the neural correlates of self-blame following mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in remitted depressed participants

Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging , 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Differential Effects of Anaesthesia on the phMRI Response to Acute Ketamine Challenge

British journal of medicine and medical research, 2012

AIMS: Pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) is powerful new tool enabling ... more AIMS: Pharmacological-challenge magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) is powerful new tool enabling researchers to map the central effects of neuroactive drugs in vivo. To employ this technique pre-clinically, head movements and the stress of restraint are usually reduced by maintaining animals under general anaesthesia. However, interactions between the drug of interest and the anaesthetic employed may potentially confound data interpretation. NMDA receptor (NMDAR) antagonists used widely to mimic schizophrenia have recently been shown to interact with the anaesthetic halothane. It may be the case that neural and cerebrovascular responses to NMDAR antagonists are dependent on the types of anaesthetic used. METHODOLOGY: We compared the phMRI response to NMDAR antagonist ketamine in rats maintained under α-chloralose to those under isoflurane anaesthesia. A randomized placebo/vehicle controlled design was used in each of the anaesthetic groups. RESULTS: Changes in the anaesthetic agent ...

Research paper thumbnail of TOMM40 rs2075650 May Represent a New Candidate Gene for Vulnerability to Major Depressive Disorder

Neuropsychopharmacology, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Interaction between a history of depression and rumination on neural response to emotional faces

Psychological medicine, 2011

Both past depressive episodes and the personality trait of depressive rumination are strong risk ... more Both past depressive episodes and the personality trait of depressive rumination are strong risk factors for future depression. Depression is associated with abnormal emotional processing, which may be a neurobiological marker for vulnerability to depression. A consistent picture has yet to emerge as to how a history of depression and the tendency to ruminate influence emotional processing. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between rumination, past depression and neural responses when processing face emotions.

Research paper thumbnail of A Single-Case fMRI Study<BR> EMDR Treatment of a Patient With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

Journal of EMDR Practice and Research, 2009

ABSTRACT This study assessed the effects of a session of eye movement desensitization and reproce... more ABSTRACT This study assessed the effects of a session of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) with auditory alternating bilateral stimulation (ABS) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of brain activations. A case study was conducted with a female participant who was suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder following a severe assault. The fMRI scan began with safe-place imagery, for purposes of comparison, and then attention to the trauma memory without ABS. After this, ABS was provided as she began using EMDR procedures to process the traumatic memory. At postsession, the traumatic memory showed robust and significant changes on self-report measures. The initiation of the EMDR protocol with provision of ABS was associated with a marked change in brain activation within the prefrontal cortex demonstrating a ventromedial shift. The authors argue that the structure of the EMDR protocol encourages such a ventromedial activation, which is then intensified by ABS to overcome the block to information processing that has been preventing natural healing from occurring spontaneously.

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of citalopram pretreatment on neuronal responses to neuropsychological tasks in normal volunteers: an FMRI study

Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 2005

Changes in serotonin neurotransmission have also been implicated in the etiology and treatment of... more Changes in serotonin neurotransmission have also been implicated in the etiology and treatment of impulse control disorders, depression, and anxiety. We have investigated the effect of enhancing serotonin function on fundamental brain processes that we have proposed are abnormal in these disorders. In all, 12 male volunteers received citalopram (7.5 mg intravenously) and placebo pretreatment in a single-blind crossover design before undertaking Go/No-go, Loss/No-loss, and covert (aversive) face emotion recognition tasks during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Blood oxygenation level dependent responses were analyzed using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM2). The tasks activated prefrontal and subcortical regions generally consistent with literature with lateral orbitofrontal cortex (BA47) common to the three tasks. Citalopram pretreatment enhanced the right BA47 responses to the No-go condition, but attenuated this response to aversive faces. Attenuations were seen fo...

Research paper thumbnail of Neural responses to sad facial expressions in current versus remitted major depression