Functional dysconnectivity in youth depression: Systematic review, meta‐analysis, and network-based integration
Youth depression has been associated with heterogenous patterns of aberrant brain connectivity. To make sense of these divergent findings, we conducted a systematic review encompassing 19 resting-state fMRI seed-to-whole-brain studies (1400 participants, comprising 795 youths with major depression a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2023-10, Vol.153, p.105394-105394, Article 105394 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Youth depression has been associated with heterogenous patterns of aberrant brain connectivity. To make sense of these divergent findings, we conducted a systematic review encompassing 19 resting-state fMRI seed-to-whole-brain studies (1400 participants, comprising 795 youths with major depression and 605 matched healthy controls). We incorporated separate meta-analyses of connectivity abnormalities across the levels of the most commonly seeded brain networks (default-mode and limbic networks) and, based on recent additions to the literature, an updated meta-analysis of amygdala dysconnectivity in youth depression. Our findings indicated broad and distributed findings at an anatomical level, which could not be captured by conventional meta-analyses in terms of spatial convergence. However, we were able to parse the complexity of region-to-region dysconnectivity by considering constituent regions as components of distributed canonical brain networks. This integration revealed dysconnectivity centred on central executive, default mode, salience, and limbic networks, converging with findings from the adult depression literature and suggesting similar neurobiological underpinnings of youth and adult depression.
•Youth depression functional dysconnectivity could be unified via network-to-network synthesis.•Disruptions centring on central executive, default mode, salience, and limbic networks emerged.•Abnormal attentional, cognitive, and emotional processes may also underlie youth depression, akin to adult depression. |
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ISSN: | 0149-7634 1873-7528 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105394 |