1.Translational application of neuroimaging in major depressive disorder: a review of psychoradiological studies.
Ziqi CHEN ; Xiaoqi HUANG ; Qiyong GONG ; Bharat B BISWAL
Frontiers of Medicine 2021;15(4):528-540
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Major depressive disorder (MDD) causes great decrements in health and quality of life with increments in healthcare costs, but the causes and pathogenesis of depression remain largely unknown, which greatly prevent its early detection and effective treatment. With the advancement of neuroimaging approaches, numerous functional and structural alterations in the brain have been detected in MDD and more recently attempts have been made to apply these findings to clinical practice. In this review, we provide an updated summary of the progress in translational application of psychoradiological findings in MDD with a specified focus on potential clinical usage. The foreseeable clinical applications for different MRI modalities were introduced according to their role in disorder classification, subtyping, and prediction. While evidence of cerebral structural and functional changes associated with MDD classification and subtyping was heterogeneous and/or sparse, the ACC and hippocampus have been consistently suggested to be important biomarkers in predicting treatment selection and treatment response. These findings underlined the potential utility of brain biomarkers for clinical practice.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Brain/diagnostic imaging*
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		                        			Depressive Disorder, Major/diagnostic imaging*
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		                        			Humans
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		                        			Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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		                        			Neuroimaging
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		                        			Quality of Life
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
2.Test-Retest Reliability of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Activation for a Vergence Eye Movement Task.
Cristian MORALES ; Suril GOHEL ; Xiaobo LI ; Mitchell SCHEIMAN ; Bharat B BISWAL ; Elio M SANTOS ; Chang YARAMOTHU ; Tara L ALVAREZ
Neuroscience Bulletin 2020;36(5):506-518
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Vergence eye movements are the inward and outward rotation of the eyes responsible for binocular coordination. While studies have mapped and investigated the neural substrates of vergence, it is not well understood whether vergence eye movements evoke the blood oxygen level-dependent signal reliably in separate experimental visits. The test-retest reliability of stimulus-induced vergence eye movement tasks during a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment is important for future randomized clinical trials (RCTs). In this study, we established region of interest (ROI) masks for the vergence neural circuit. Twenty-seven binocularly normal young adults participated in two functional imaging sessions measured on different days on the same 3T Siemens scanner. The fMRI experiments used a block design of sustained visual fixation and rest blocks interleaved between task blocks that stimulated eight or four vergence eye movements. The test-retest reliability of task-activation was assessed using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and that of spatial extent was assessed using the Dice coefficient. Functional activation during the vergence eye movement task of eight movements compared to rest was repeatable within the primary visual cortex (ICC = 0.8), parietal eye fields (ICC = 0.6), supplementary eye field (ICC = 0.5), frontal eye fields (ICC = 0.5), and oculomotor vermis (ICC = 0.6). The results demonstrate significant test-retest reliability in the ROIs of the vergence neural substrates for functional activation magnitude and spatial extent using the stimulus protocol of a task block stimulating eight vergence eye movements compared to sustained fixation. These ROIs can be used in future longitudinal RCTs to study patient populations with vergence dysfunctions.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
            
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