Neural substrates of rewarding and punishing self representations in depressed suicide-attempting adolescents

Adolescence is a period of plasticity in neural substrates underpinning self-processing. Such substrates are worth studying in depressed youth at risks for suicide because altered neurobiology of self-processing might partially explain differences between suicide attempting youth versus youth who co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of psychiatric research 2022-04, Vol.148, p.204-213
Hauptverfasser: Quevedo, Karina, Teoh, Jia Yuan, Liu, Guanmin, Santana-Gonzalez, Carmen, Forbes, Erika E., Engstrom, Maggie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Adolescence is a period of plasticity in neural substrates underpinning self-processing. Such substrates are worth studying in depressed youth at risks for suicide because altered neurobiology of self-processing might partially explain differences between suicide attempting youth versus youth who contemplate but do not attempt suicide. Understanding altered substrates of self-processing among depressed adolescents with suicide attempts is critical for developing targeted prevention and treatment. Healthy youth (N = 40), youth with depression and low (N = 33) or high suicide ideation (N = 28), and youth with depression and past suicide attempt (N = 28) heard positive or negative self-descriptors during fMRI and evaluated them from their own, their mother's, classmates', and best friend's perspectives. Lower bilateral caudate activity during positive self-processing distinguished suicide attempting adolescents from all other youth. Higher bilateral caudate activity during negatively valenced self-processing tended to distinguish youth with depression. Blunted reward circuitry during positive vs. negative self-related material tended to distinguish suicide attempting youth, reflecting potentially enhanced behavioral preparedness for punishing vs. rewarding self-relevant cues.
ISSN:0022-3956
1879-1379
DOI:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2022.01.037