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Bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) are severe mood disorders that belong to the most debilitating diseases worldwide. Differentiating both mood disorders often poses a major clinical challenge, leading to frequent misdiagnoses. Objective biomarkers able to differentiate individuals with BD and MDD therefore represent a psychiatric research field of utmost importance. Recent studies have applied resting-state fMRI paradigms and found promising results differentiating both disorders based on the acquired data. However, most of these studies have focused their efforts on acutely depressed patients. Thus, it remains unclear whether the aberrations remain in a symptomless disease state.
The here presented study addresses these issues by evaluating the ability to differentiate both disorders from one another by conducting a between-group comparison of functional brain network connectivity (FNC) obtained from resting-state fMRI data. Data were collected from 20 BD, 15 MDD patients and 30 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (HC). Graph theoretical analyses were applied to detect differences in functional network organization between the groups on a global and regional network level.
Network analysis detected frontal, temporal and subcortical nodes in emotion regulation areas such as the limbic system and associated regions exhibiting significant differences in network integration and segregation in BD compared to MDD patients and HC. Participants with MDD and HC only differed in frontal and insular network centrality.
These results indicate that a significantly altered brain network topology in the limbic system might be a trait marker specific to BD. Brain network analysis in these regions may therefore be used to differentiate euthymic BD not only from HC but also from patients with MDD.
Introduction: Previous studies have established graph theoretical analysis of functional network connectivity (FNC) as a potential tool to detect neurobiological underpinnings of psychiatric disorders. Despite the promising outcomes in studies that examined FNC aberrancies in bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD), there is still a lack of research comparing both mood disorders, especially in a nondepressed state. In this study, we used graph theoretical network analysis to compare brain network properties of euthymic BD, euthymic MDD and healthy controls (HC) to evaluate whether these groups showed distinct features in FNC.
Methods: We collected resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from 20 BD patients, 15 patients with recurrent MDD as well as 30 age‐ and gender‐matched HC. Graph theoretical analyses were then applied to investigate functional brain networks on a global and regional network level.
Results: Global network analysis revealed a significantly higher mean global clustering coefficient in BD compared to HC. We further detected frontal, temporal and subcortical nodes in emotion regulation areas such as the limbic system and associated regions exhibiting significant differences in network integration and segregation in BD compared to MDD patients and HC. Participants with MDD and HC only differed in frontal and insular network centrality.
Conclusion: In conclusion, our findings indicate that a significantly altered brain network topology in the limbic system might be a trait marker specific to BD. Brain network analysis in these regions may therefore be used to differentiate euthymic BD not only from HC but also from patients with MDD.