Neural processing biases in female patients recovered from depression
background Recently, the frequently
found increased memory sensitivity for negative
stimuli in acutely depressed patients has been
associated with an over-activation of the amygdala-
hippocampus and/or amygdala-caudateputamen
system.
aim To investigate whether these behavioral
memory biases and associated neural overactivations
are maintained when being remitted
from depression.
methods We investigated medicationfree
patients remitted from maximal three episodes
of depression (mean hdrs=4.9) in comparison
with healthy controls (each n=14) using
event-related fmri (1.5T scanner, standard epi-sequence,
optimized for mtl activations). Subjects
were scanned during encoding of positive,
neutral and negative words in a direct subsequent
free recall memory paradigm.
results There were no behavioral differences
in subsequent memory performance
between patients and controls. A general comparison
of neural activity (whole brain: p<0.001 uncorrected)
for later remembered and later forgotten
words confirmed previous findings of engagement
of left amygdala and bilateral hippocampus
in emotional memory formation in both groups.
An interaction of group x valence x memory gave
rise to significant effects in left amygdala and
right caudate-putamen (p<0.001 small volume
corrected). Inspection of the contrast estimates
suggests that the interaction in the left amygdala
mainly arose from a larger subsequent memory
effect to negative words in the patient group.
conclusion Even in clinical remission
formerly depressed female patients still show neural
processing biases during memory formation
for negative words. These neural activation differences
may sensitize former mdd patients to
future relapses. Implications will de discussed in
relation to the cognitive bias theories on the one
hand and the other trait-related fmri findings
presented during this symposium.