Apathy in depression: An arterial spin labeling perfusion MRI study

ElsevierVolume 157, January 2023, Pages 7-16Journal of Psychiatric ResearchAuthor links open overlay panelHighlights•

An MRI perfusion ASL study of apathy in depression.

In this sample of depressed patients apathy related to brain regional perfusion.

A negative relationship between the left ACC CBF and the AES score was significant.

Biological characterization of apathy could help phenotyping subtypes of depression.

A step forward understanding motivation in depression and its treatment.

AbstractIntroduction

Apathy, as defined as a deficit in goal-directed behaviors, is a critical clinical dimension in depression associated with chronic impairment. Little is known about its cerebral perfusion specificities in depression. To explore neurovascular mechanisms underpinning apathy in depression by pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Methods

Perfusion imaging analysis was performed on 90 depressed patients included in a prospective study between November 2014 and February 2017. Imaging data included anatomical 3D T1-weighted and perfusion pCASL sequences. A multiple regression analysis relating the quantified cerebral blood flow (CBF) in different regions of interest defined from the FreeSurfer atlas, to the Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) total score was conducted.

Results

After confound adjustment (demographics, disease and clinical characteristics) and correction for multiple comparisons, we observed a strong negative relationship between the CBF in the left anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the AES score (standardized beta = −0.74, corrected p value = 0.0008).

Conclusion

Our results emphasized the left ACC as a key region involved in apathy severity in a population of depressed participants. Perfusion correlates of apathy in depression evidenced in this study may contribute to characterize different phenotypes of depression.

Keywords

Depressive disorder

Arterial spin labeling

Perfusion MRI

Apathy

Neuroimaging

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