Artículos de revistas
Neural activity changes to emotional stimuli in healthy individuals under chronic use of clomipramine
Fecha
2010Registro en:
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, v.24, n.8, p.1165-1174, 2010
0269-8811
10.1177/0269881109105786
Autor
ALMEIDA, J. R. Cardoso de
PHILLIPS, M. L.
CERQUEIRA, C. T.
ZILBERMAN, M.
LOBO, D.
HENNA, E.
TAVARES, H.
AMARO, E.
GORENSTEIN, C.
GENTIL, V.
BUSATTO, G. F.
Institución
Resumen
Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies examined neural activity responses to emotive stimuli in healthy individuals after acute/subacute administration of antidepressants. We now report the effects of repeated use of the antidepressant clomipramine on fMRI data acquired during presentation of emotion-provoking and neutral stimuli on healthy volunteers. A total of 12 volunteers were evaluated with fMRI after receiving low doses of clomipramine for 4 weeks and again after 4 weeks of washout. Fear-, happiness-, anger-provoking and neutral pictures from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) were used. Data analysis was performed with statistical parametric mapping (P < 0.05). Paired t-test comparisons for each condition between medicated and unmedicated states showed, to negative valence paradigms, decrease in brain activity in the amygdala when participants were medicated. We also demonstrated, across both positive and negative valence paradigms, consistent decreases in brain activity in the medicated state in the anterior cingulate gyrus and insula. This is the first report of modulatory effects of repeated antidepressant use on the central representation of somatic states in response to emotions of both negative and positive valences in healthy individuals. Also, our results corroborate findings of antidepressant-induced temporolimbic activity changes to emotion-provoking stimuli obtained in studies of subjects treated acutely with such agents.