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. 2015 Feb 1;77(3):276-284.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2014.02.014. Epub 2014 Feb 26.

Ventromedial prefrontal cortex is critical for the regulation of amygdala activity in humans

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Ventromedial prefrontal cortex is critical for the regulation of amygdala activity in humans

Julian C Motzkin et al. Biol Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Background: Dysfunction in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is believed to play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of mood and anxiety disorders. Leading neurocircuitry models of these disorders propose that hypoactivity in the vmPFC engenders disinhibited activity of the amygdala and, consequently, pathologically elevated levels of negative affect. This model predicts that a selective loss or diminution of function of the vmPFC would result in heightened activity of the amygdala. Although this prediction has been borne out in rodent lesion and electrophysiologic studies using fear conditioning and extinction paradigms, there has not yet been a definitive test of this prediction in humans.

Methods: We tested this prediction through a novel use of functional magnetic resonance imaging in four neurosurgical patients with focal, bilateral vmPFC damage.

Results: Relative to neurologically healthy comparison subjects, the patients with vmPFC lesions exhibited potentiated amygdala responses to aversive images and elevated resting-state amygdala functional connectivity. No comparable group differences were observed for activity in other brain regions.

Conclusions: These results provide unique evidence for the critical role of the vmPFC in regulating activity of the amygdala in humans and help elucidate the causal neural interactions that underlie mental illness.

Keywords: Amygdala; Anxiety; Emotion; Lesion; Prefrontal cortex; fMRI.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Lesion overlap of vmPFC patients. Color indicates the number of overlapping lesions at each voxel. All vmPFC patients had damage to the medial one-third of the orbitofrontal cortex and the ventral one-third of medial surface of prefrontal cortex, bilaterally. This area includes Brodmann areas 11, 12, 24, 25, 32, and the medial portion of 10 below the level of the genu of the corpus callosum, as well as subjacent white matter.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Neural responses to aversive>neutral pictures. (a) NC subjects (PFWE<0.05; FWE, family wise error). (b) vmPFC lesion patients (displayed at corrected NC threshold of T=3.9 for comparison). Both groups exhibited robust bilateral amygdala responses, as well as responses in visual cortex, lateral temporal cortex, thalamus, and cingulate gyrus (see Table 2 for full cluster list).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Greater right amygdala responses to aversive pictures in vmPFC lesion patients. (a) Task-derived right and left amygdala ROIs (red) used to extract mean percent signal change (PSC) estimates for group comparisons. vmPFC lesion overlap shaded in gray for reference. (b) Left, plots of right amygdala PSC for individual NC (black circles) and vmPFC (red and blue triangles) subjects in response to aversive pictures (top) and neutral pictures (bottom). Horizontal lines represent the mean and 95% confidence intervals of PSC values in the NC group. Right, mean timeseries of right amygdala PSC in response to aversive and neutral pictures for vmPFC (red, blue) and NC (black) subjects (width of shaded area corresponds to ±1 s.e.m.). (c) Plot and mean timeseries of PSC extracted from the left amygdala ROI. Dark horizontal bars on timeseries plots indicate picture duration (1 s). **P<0.01
Figure 4
Figure 4
Greater right amygdala rest-state functional connectivity in vmPFC lesion patients. (a) Right amygdala seed region (red). (b) Group difference map at corrected PFWE<0.05, showing greater right amygdala connectivity with a cluster in the ipsilateral anterior temporal lobe in the vmPFC lesion group (see Fig. S4 for average amygdala connectivity maps from each group). (c) Plot showing distribution of connectivity values (z-scores) in the significant cluster.

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