Disrupted spatiotemporal complexity of resting-state electroencephalogram dynamics is associated with adaptive and maladaptive rumination in major depressive disorder
Wang, Jing and Liu, Qi and Tian, Feng and Zhou, Shuzhe and Parra, Mario Alfredo and Wang, Huali and Yu, Xin (2022) Disrupted spatiotemporal complexity of resting-state electroencephalogram dynamics is associated with adaptive and maladaptive rumination in major depressive disorder. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 16. 829755. ISSN 1662-453X (https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.829755)
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Abstract
Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) exhibit abnormal rumination, including both adaptive and maladaptive forms. However, the neural substrates of rumination in depression remain poorly understood. We hypothesize that divergent spatiotemporal complexity of brain oscillations would be associated with the levels of rumination in MDD. We employed the multi-scale entropy (MSE), power and phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) to estimate the complexity of rhythmic dynamics from the eye-closed high-density electroencephalographic (EEG) data in treatment-naive patients with MDD (n = 24) and healthy controls (n = 22). The depressive, brooding, and reflective subscales of the Ruminative Response Scale were assessed. MDD patients showed higher MSE in timescales finer than 5 (cluster P = 0.038) and gamma power (cluster P = 0.034), as well as lower PAC values between alpha/low beta and gamma bands (cluster P = 0.002- 0.021). Higher reflective rumination in MDD was region-specifically associated with the more localized EEG dynamics, including the greater MSE in scales finer than 8 (cluster P = 0.008), power in gamma (cluster P = 0.018) and PAC in low beta-gamma (cluster P = 0.042), as well as weaker alpha-gamma PAC (cluster P = 0.016- 0.029). Besides, the depressive and brooding rumination in MDD showed the lack of correlations with global long-range EEG variables. Our findings support the disturbed neural communications and point to the spatial reorganization of brain networks in a timescale-dependent migration toward local during adaptive and maladaptive rumination in MDD. These findings may provide potential implications on probing and modulating dynamic neuronal fluctuations during the rumination in depression.
ORCID iDs
Wang, Jing, Liu, Qi, Tian, Feng, Zhou, Shuzhe, Parra, Mario Alfredo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2412-648X, Wang, Huali and Yu, Xin;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 80207 Dates: DateEvent9 May 2022Published28 March 2022Accepted6 December 2021SubmittedSubjects: Medicine > Internal medicine > Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Psychological Sciences and Health > Psychology Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 14 Apr 2022 09:53 Last modified: 15 Dec 2024 01:36 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/80207