2019, Number 3
<< Back Next >>
Arch Neurocien 2019; 24 (3)
Cortical circuits, their functional connectivity and cognitive processes in the comorbid disorder; obsessive compulsive and major depressive
Minotta-Valencia L, Minotta-Valencia C
Language: English
References: 63
Page: 44-52
PDF size: 323.84 Kb.
ABSTRACT
The present work makes a review of the literature through which rumination and repetitive
negative thoughts are explored as mechanisms for maintaining symptoms in patients with
obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and / or major depressive disorder (MDD). It is taken as
a sample, studies dating between 2010 and 2018 that measure cortical activation patterns
related to cognitive control processes, and self-referential processing, memory coding while
performing tasks, including among their methods, resonance functional magnetic, blood
oxygenation levels and comparative in terms of participants; subjects with depression vs.
control diagnosis, comparative regarding the application of drug or behavioral treatment
, studies using neuroticism questionnaires, research-based theorists. It is concluded
that the observable phenomenology of both disorders when presented together, integrate
harmonic connectivity patterns with the same basic transdiagnotic functions, compatible
with potentials that run in parallel by jointly overactivating certain brain areas, whose altered
mode of functioning is unveils it as the base substrate on which, it is possible to explain
alterations of inhibitory control processes such as executive functions, operational memory
and deregulation of the dream architecture.
REFERENCES
Papageorgiou CC and Rabavilas AD. Abnormal P600 in obsessive–compulsive disorder. A comparison with healthy controls. Psychiatry Res 2003; 119, 133-143.
Wiswede D, Muntel TF, Kramer UM and Russeler J. Embodied emotion modulates neural signature of performance monitoring. Plos ONE 2009; 4(6).
Cavabagh, Grundler T, Frank M and Allen J. Altered cingulate sub-region activation accounts for task related dissociation in ERN amplitude as a fuction of obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Neuropsy 2010; (48), 2098-2109.
Urbistondo C, Macbeth G, Kichic R, Ibáñez A. El modelo frontoestriado del trastorno obsesivo compulsivo: evidencia convergente de estudios de potenciales evocados relacionados a eventos. Revista Virtual de Facultad de psicología y psicopedagogía de la Universidad del Salvador 2011; 25(1), 120-133.
Ballesteros S. La atención selectiva modula el procesamiento de la información y la memoria implícita. Acción psicológica 2014;11(1), 7-20.
Goldberg E. El cerebro ejecutivo. Barcelona: Crítica Drakontos; 2002.
Baddeley A and Della S. Working memory and executive control (and discussion). Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences 1996; 351(1346), 1397-1404.
Soto AM. Aspectos neuropsicológicos del trastorno obsesivo compulsivo. Rev Psicol 2002; 2(1), 61-68.
Kuisk LA, Bertelson AD and Walsh JK.Presleep cognitive hyperarousal and affect as factors in objective and subjective insomnia. Perceptual and Motor Skills 1989; 69, 1219-1225.
Lichstein KL and Rosenthal TL. Insomniacs perceptions of cognitive versus somatic determinants of sleep disturbance. J Abnormal Psychol 1980; 89, 105-107.
Harvey AG. Pre-sleep cognitive activity in insomnia: A comparison of sleep-onset insomniacs and good sleepers. British J Clin Psychol 2000; 39, 275-286.
Harvey AG. A cognitive model of nsomnia. Behav Res Ther 2002; 40(8), 869-93.
Harvey AG. Trouble in bed: The role of pre-sleep worry and intrusions in the maintenance of insomnia. J Cog Psychother 2002; 16(2), 161-177.
Borkovec TD, Robinson E, Pruzinsky T and DePree JA. Preliminary exploration of worry: some characteristics and processes. Behav Res Ther 1983; 21, 9-16.
Borkovec TD. Pseudo (experiential)-insomnia and idiopathic (objetive) insomnia: theoretical and therapeutic issues. Adv Behav Research Ther 1979; 2, 27-55.
Wegner DM, Schneider DJ, et al..Paradoxical effects of thought suppression. J Pers Soc Psychol 1987; 53, 5-13.
Wegner DM, Erber R and Zanakos S. Ironic Processes in the mental control of mood and mood-related thought. J Pers Soc Psychol 1993; (65): 1093-1104.
Salkovskis PM. Cognitive-behavioral factors and the persistence of intrusive thoughts inobsessional problems. Behav Res Ther 1989; 27, 677-682.
Salkovskis PM, and Campbell P. Thought suppression induces intrusion in naturally occurring negative intrusive thoughts. Behav Res Ther 1994; 32, 1-8.
Fortier BE, Beaulieu BS, Ivers H, an Morin CM. Insomnia and daytime cognitiveperformance: a meta-analysis. Sleep Med Rev 2012;16(1), 83-94.
Altena E, Van Der Werf, YD, Strijers RL, et al. Sleep loss affects vigilance: effects of chronic insomnia and sleep therapy. J Sleep Res 2008; 17(3), 335-343.
Hauri PJ. Cognitive deficits in insomnia patients. Acta Neurol Bel 1997; 97(2), 113-117.
Fernandez MJ, Calhoun S, Bixler EO, et al.. Insomnia with objective short sleep duration is associated with deficits in neuropsychological performance: a general population study. Sleep 2012; 33(4), 459-465.
Liu H, Wang D, Li Y, Li Z, Zhang Y, Lei F, Tang X. Examination of daytime sleepiness and cognitive performance testing in patients with primary insomnia. PloS one 2014; 9(6).
Fortier BE and Morin CM. Cognitive impairment in individuals with insomnia: clinical significance and correlates. Sleep 2014; 37(11), 1787-1798.
Li Y, Liu H, Weed JG, Ren R, Sun Y, Tan L and Tang X. Deficits in attention performance are associated with insufficiency of slow-wave sleep in insomnia. Sleep Med 2016; 24, 124-130.
Kyle, SD, Sexton CE, Feige B, Luik AL, Jane J, et al. Sleep and cognitive performance: cross-sectional associations in the UK Biobank. Sleep Med 2017; 38, 85-91.
Palagini L, Mauri M, Dell’Osso L, Riemann D and Drake CL. Trait-and pre-sleep-state-dependent arousal insomnia disorders: what rolo may sleep reactivity and sleep-related metacognitions play? A pilot study. Sleep Med 2016; 25, 42-48.
Fichten CS, Libman E, Creti L, Amsel R, et al.. Thoughts during awake time in older good and poor sleepers-the self-statement test: 60+. Cognitive Therapy and Research 1998; 22, 1-20.
Jansson Man Linton SJ. Psychological mechanisms in the maintenance of insomnia: arousal, distress, and sleeprelated beliefs. Behav Res Ther 2007; 45(3), 511-521.
Harvey AG, et al.. (Mis) perception of sleep in insomnia: a puzzle and resolution.Psychol Bull 2012; 138(1), 77-101.
Norell CA, Jansson FM, Tillfors M, Harvey AG, et al. Cognitive processes and their association with persistence and remission of insomnia: findings from a longitudinal study in the general population. Behav Res Ther 2014; 54, 38-48.
Yang CM, Lin SC, et al.. Transient insomnia versus chronic insomnia: a comparison study of sleep-related psychological/behavioral characteristics. J Clin Psychol 2013; 69(10): 1094.
Williams J, Roth A, Vatthauer K and McCrae C.Cognitive behavioral treatment of insomnia. Chest 2013; 554-565.
Espie CA. Understanding insomnia through cognitive modelling. Sleep Med 2007; 4, 3-8.
Ogundele A, Ighoroje M, Abayomi O. Insomnia and dysfunctional beliefs and attitudes about sleep among Elderly Persons in Abeokuta, Nigeria. Inter J Clin Psy 2017; 25-31.
Klumpp H, Hosseini B, et al. Self-Reportd Sleep Quality Modulates Amygdala Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Anxiety and Depression. Front Psychiatry 2018; 29(9), 220.
Marques DR, Gomes AA, Clemente V, et al. Self-referential dysfunctio and default-mode hyperactivation in psychophysiological insomnia patients: A case-control fMRI study. J Psychophysiol 2018; 32(3), 140-155.
Lemogne C, Mayberg H, Bergouignan L, Volle E, et al. Self-referential processing and the prefrontal cortex over the course of depression: a pilot study. J Affect Disor 2010; 124(I-II), 196-201.
Lemogne C, Delaveau P, Freton M, Guionnet S, and Fossati P. Medial prefrontal cortex and theself in major depression. J Affect Disor 2012; 136(1-2), e1-e11.
Sheline YI, Barch DM, Price JL, Rundle MM, Vaishnavi SN, Snyder AZ, Raichle ME. The default mode network and self-referential processes in depression 2009; 106(6), 1942-1947.
Bonhage C, Weber F, et al.Thinking about thinking:neural mechanisms and effects on memory. Neurolmage 2016; 127, 203-214.
Zhu X, Wang X, Xiao J, Liao J, et al.. Evidence of dissociation pattern in resting-state default mode network connectivity in first-episode, treatment naive major depression patients. Biol Psychiatry 2012; 71(7), 611-617.
Hamilton JP, Furman DJ, Chang C, Thomason ME, Dennis E and Gotlib IH. Default-mode and task-positive network activity in major depressive disorder: implications for adaptive and maladaptive rumination. Biol psychiatry 2011; 70(4), 327-333.
Berman MG, Peltier S, Evan Nee D, Kross E and Deldin PJ. Depression, rumination and the default network. Soc Cog Affect Neurosci 2011; 6(5), 548-555.
Hamilton JP, Farmer M, Fogelman P, and Gotlib IH. Depressive rumination, the default-mode network, and the dark matter of clinical neuroscience. Biol Psychiatry 2015; 78(4), 224-230.
Grimm S, Jutta E, Boesiger P, Schuepbach D, Boeker H and Northoff G. Reduced negative BOLD responses in the default mode network and increased self-focus in depression 2011; 12(8), 627-637.
Smallwood J and Andrews-Hanna J. Not all minds that wander are lost: the importance of a balanced perspective on the mind-wandering state. Front Psychol 2013; 4(441).
Kucyi A. Just a thought: How mind-wandering is represented in dynamic brain connectivity. Neurolmage 2017; 1053-8119.
Gruberger M, Ben SE, Levkovitz Y, Zangen A and Hendler T. Towards a neuroscience of mind-wandering. Frontiers in human neuroscience 2011; 5(56).
Christoff K, Irving ZC, Fox CR, et al. Mind-wandering as spontaneous thought: a dynamic framework. Nat Rev Neurosci 2016; 17, 718-731.
McVay JC and Kane MJ. Does mind wandering reflect executive function or executive failure? Comment on Smallwood and Schooler (2006) and Watkins (2008). Psychol Bull 2010;136(2),188-197.
Weissman DH, Roberts KC, Visscher KM, an Woldorff MG. The neural bases of momentary lapses in attention. Nat Neurosci 2016; 9(7), 971-978.
Kane MJ, Brown LH, McVay JC, Silvia PJ, et al. For whom the mindwanders, and when: an experience-sampling study of working memory and executive control in daily life. Psychol Science 2017; 18(7), 614-621.
Robinson MK, Gath KI and Unsworth N. The neurotic wandering mind: An individual differences investigation of neuroticism, mind-wandering, and executive control. Q J Exp Psychol 2017; 70(4), 649-663.
Hawkins GE, Mittner M, Boekel W, Heathcote A and Forstmann BU. Toward a model-based cognitive neuroscience of mind wandering. Neurosci 2015; 310, 290-305.
Yoshimura S, Okamoto Y, Onoda K, Matsunaga M, et al. Rostral anteiror cingulate cortex activity mediates the relationship between the depressive symptoms and the medial prefrontal cortex activity. J Affect Disord 2010; 122(I-II), 76-85.
Johnson MK, Nolen-Hoeksema S, Mitchell KJ and Levin Y. Medial cortex activity, self-reflection and depression. Soc Cog Affect Neurosci 2009; 4, 313-327.
Grimm S, Jutta E, Boesiger P, Schuepbach D, Boeker H, and Northoff G. Reduced negative BOLD responses in the default mode network and increased self-focus in depression 2011; 12(8), 627-637.
Nolan SA, Roberts JE, et al..Neuroticism and ruminative response style as predictors of change in depressive symptomatology. Ther Cog Res 1998; 22(5), 445-455.
Dickson KS, Ciesla JA, et al. Rumination, Worry, Cognitive avoidance and behavioral avoidance: examination of temporal effects. Behav Ther 2012; 43(3), 629-640.
Watkins E, Moulds M, Mackintosh B. Comparisons between rumination and worry in a non-clinical population. Behav Res Ther 2012; 43(12), 1577-1585.
Watkins E, Moulds M and Mackintosh B. Comparisons between rumination and worry in a non-clinical population. Behav Res Ther 2005; 43(12), 1577-1585.