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A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of emotional Stroop in euthymic bipolar disorder
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of emotional Stroop in euthymic bipolar disorder

Jim Lagopoulos and G S Malhi
NeuroReport, Vol.18(15), pp.1583-1587
2007
url
https://doi.org/10.1097/WNR.0b013e3282efa07aView
Published Version

Abstract

affect bipolar disorder euthymia functional magnetic resonance imaging galvanic skin response Stroop
Bipolar disorder is regarded as a disorder of mood and initial studies have focused on structural abnormalities in limbic networks, known to subserve mood. More recently, functional imaging studies allude to affect processing deficits, which may involve frontostriatal networks. This study sought to explore disturbances in networks involved in the processing of negative affect in euthymic bipolar patients. We used simultaneous functional magnetic resonance imaging and galvanic skin responsivity to explore disturbances in these networks. When processing negative affect, controls recruited a distributed subcortical-prefrontal network. In contrast, patients could only activate a subcortical network that included the amygdala and hippocampus. This study provides evidence for a disconnection in the transfer of information within frontostriatal networks in bipolar disorder. © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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