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Neural abnormalities in early-onset and adolescence-onset conduct disorder

Neural abnormalities in early-onset and adolescence-onset conduct disorder
Neural abnormalities in early-onset and adolescence-onset conduct disorder
Context: conduct disorder (CD) is characterized by severe antisocial behavior that emerges in childhood (early-onset CD [EO-CD]) or adolescence (adolescence-onset CD [AO-CD]). Early-onset CD is proposed to have a neurodevelopmental basis, whereas AO-CD is thought to emerge owing to social mimicry of deviant peers. However, this developmental taxonomic theory is debated after reports of neuropsychological impairments in both CD subtypes. A critical, although unaddressed, issue is whether these subtypes present similar or distinct neurophysiological profiles. Hence, we investigated neurophysiological responses to emotional and neutral faces in regions associated with antisocial behavior (ie, the amygdala, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, insula, and orbitofrontal cortex) in individuals with EO-CD and AO-CD and in healthy control subjects.

Objective: to investigate whether EO-CD and AO-CD subjects show neurophysiological abnormalities.

Design: case-control study.

Setting: government research institute, university department.

Participants: seventy-five male adolescents and young adults aged 16 to 21 years, including 27 with EO-CD, 25 with AO-CD, and 23 healthy controls. Main Outcome Measure Neural activations measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging while participants viewed angry, sad, and neutral faces.

Results: comparing angry vs neutral faces, participants with both CD subtypes displayed reduced responses in regions associated with antisocial behavior compared with controls; differences between the CD subtypes were not significant. Comparing each expression with fixation baseline revealed an abnormal (increased) amygdala response to neutral but not angry faces in both groups of CD relative to controls. For sad vs neutral faces, reduced amygdala activation was observed in EO-CD relative to AO-CD and control participants. Comparing each expression with fixation revealed hypoactive amygdala responses to sadness in individuals with EO-CD relative to AO-CD participants and controls. These findings were not accounted for by attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms.

Conclusions: neurophysiological abnormalities are observed in both CD subtypes, contrary to the developmental taxonomic theory of CD. Additional amygdala hypofunction in relation to sad expressions might indicate why EO-CD is more severe and persistent than AO-CD.
0003-990X
729-738
Passamonti, Luca
71e1cf10-463b-45f0-acc2-0d74459d9f20
Fairchild, Graeme
f99bc911-978e-48c2-9754-c6460666a95f
Goodyer, Ian M.
b61b8ae9-a305-462b-9fe5-66f8d3fb6312
Hurford, Georgina
c821b5c8-ff46-4ba7-a1c3-2b3d2f5dffe6
Hagan, Cindy C.
b4ec5466-b17c-465f-b88d-a671ffcb97e4
Rowe, James B.
48b81593-e26b-431f-b2c0-e5aa1cf7c68c
Calder, Andrew J.
7e520a50-2877-4625-b7e5-c2486b232bc2
Passamonti, Luca
71e1cf10-463b-45f0-acc2-0d74459d9f20
Fairchild, Graeme
f99bc911-978e-48c2-9754-c6460666a95f
Goodyer, Ian M.
b61b8ae9-a305-462b-9fe5-66f8d3fb6312
Hurford, Georgina
c821b5c8-ff46-4ba7-a1c3-2b3d2f5dffe6
Hagan, Cindy C.
b4ec5466-b17c-465f-b88d-a671ffcb97e4
Rowe, James B.
48b81593-e26b-431f-b2c0-e5aa1cf7c68c
Calder, Andrew J.
7e520a50-2877-4625-b7e5-c2486b232bc2

Passamonti, Luca, Fairchild, Graeme, Goodyer, Ian M., Hurford, Georgina, Hagan, Cindy C., Rowe, James B. and Calder, Andrew J. (2010) Neural abnormalities in early-onset and adolescence-onset conduct disorder. Archives of General Psychiatry, 67 (7), 729-738. (doi:10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2010.75). (PMID:20603454)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Context: conduct disorder (CD) is characterized by severe antisocial behavior that emerges in childhood (early-onset CD [EO-CD]) or adolescence (adolescence-onset CD [AO-CD]). Early-onset CD is proposed to have a neurodevelopmental basis, whereas AO-CD is thought to emerge owing to social mimicry of deviant peers. However, this developmental taxonomic theory is debated after reports of neuropsychological impairments in both CD subtypes. A critical, although unaddressed, issue is whether these subtypes present similar or distinct neurophysiological profiles. Hence, we investigated neurophysiological responses to emotional and neutral faces in regions associated with antisocial behavior (ie, the amygdala, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, insula, and orbitofrontal cortex) in individuals with EO-CD and AO-CD and in healthy control subjects.

Objective: to investigate whether EO-CD and AO-CD subjects show neurophysiological abnormalities.

Design: case-control study.

Setting: government research institute, university department.

Participants: seventy-five male adolescents and young adults aged 16 to 21 years, including 27 with EO-CD, 25 with AO-CD, and 23 healthy controls. Main Outcome Measure Neural activations measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging while participants viewed angry, sad, and neutral faces.

Results: comparing angry vs neutral faces, participants with both CD subtypes displayed reduced responses in regions associated with antisocial behavior compared with controls; differences between the CD subtypes were not significant. Comparing each expression with fixation baseline revealed an abnormal (increased) amygdala response to neutral but not angry faces in both groups of CD relative to controls. For sad vs neutral faces, reduced amygdala activation was observed in EO-CD relative to AO-CD and control participants. Comparing each expression with fixation revealed hypoactive amygdala responses to sadness in individuals with EO-CD relative to AO-CD participants and controls. These findings were not accounted for by attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms.

Conclusions: neurophysiological abnormalities are observed in both CD subtypes, contrary to the developmental taxonomic theory of CD. Additional amygdala hypofunction in relation to sad expressions might indicate why EO-CD is more severe and persistent than AO-CD.

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More information

Published date: July 2010
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 178045
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/178045
ISSN: 0003-990X
PURE UUID: b6bf1a89-90d6-4afd-aacd-51d0f207e41f
ORCID for Graeme Fairchild: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7814-9938

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Date deposited: 05 Apr 2011 08:32
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: Luca Passamonti
Author: Graeme Fairchild ORCID iD
Author: Ian M. Goodyer
Author: Georgina Hurford
Author: Cindy C. Hagan
Author: James B. Rowe
Author: Andrew J. Calder

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