reviewAmerican Journal of PsychiatryMar 21, 2017BRONZE OA

Identification of Common Neural Circuit Disruptions in Cognitive Control Across Psychiatric Disorders

VA Palo Alto Health Care System

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

Cognitive deficits are a common feature of psychiatric disorders. The authors investigated the nature of disruptions in neural circuitry underlying cognitive control capacities across psychiatric disorders through a transdiagnostic neuroimaging meta-analysis. METHOD: A PubMed search was conducted for whole-brain functional neuroimaging articles published through June 2015 that compared activation in patients with axis I disorders and matched healthy control participants during cognitive control tasks. Tasks that probed performance or conflict monitoring, response inhibition or selection, set shifting, verbal fluency, and recognition or working memory were included. Activation likelihood estimation meta-analyses were conducted on peak voxel coordinates.

Results

The 283 experiments submitted to meta-analysis included 5,728 control participants and 5,493 patients with various disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar or unipolar depression, anxiety disorders, and substance use disorders). Transdiagnostically abnormal activation was evident in the left prefrontal cortex as well as the anterior insula, the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, the right intraparietal sulcus, and the midcingulate/presupplementary motor area. Disruption was also observed in a more anterior cluster in the dorsal cingulate cortex, which overlapped with a network of structural perturbation that the authors previously reported in a transdiagnostic meta-analysis of gray matter volume.

Citation impact

641
total citations
FWCI
24.34
Percentile
100%
References
48
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Identification (biology)
  • Cognition
  • Psychiatry
  • Psychology
  • Medicine
  • Biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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