Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task

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Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task. / Macoveanu, Julian; Miskowiak, Kamilla; Kessing, Lars V; Vinberg, Maj; Siebner, Hartwig R.

In: Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Vol. 41, No. 1, 2016, p. 38-47.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Macoveanu, J, Miskowiak, K, Kessing, LV, Vinberg, M & Siebner, HR 2016, 'Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task', Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 38-47. https://doi.org/10.1503/jpn.140220

APA

Macoveanu, J., Miskowiak, K., Kessing, L. V., Vinberg, M., & Siebner, H. R. (2016). Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task. Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, 41(1), 38-47. https://doi.org/10.1503/jpn.140220

Vancouver

Macoveanu J, Miskowiak K, Kessing LV, Vinberg M, Siebner HR. Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task. Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. 2016;41(1):38-47. https://doi.org/10.1503/jpn.140220

Author

Macoveanu, Julian ; Miskowiak, Kamilla ; Kessing, Lars V ; Vinberg, Maj ; Siebner, Hartwig R. / Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task. In: Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. 2016 ; Vol. 41, No. 1. pp. 38-47.

Bibtex

@article{2029b4b2f3ab492e820fb40c6d5068a4,
title = "Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Healthy first-degree relatives of patients with affective disorders are at increased risk for affective disorders and express discrete structural and functional abnormalities in the brain reward system. However, value-based decision making is not well understood in these at-risk individuals.METHODS: We investigated healthy monozygotic and dizygotic twins with or without a co-twin history of affective disorders (high-risk and low-risk groups, respectively) using functional MRI during a gambling task. We assessed group differences in activity related to gambling risk over the entire brain.RESULTS: We included 30 monozygotic and 37 dizygotic twins in our analysis. Neural activity in the anterior insula and ventral striatum increased linearly with the amount of gambling risk in the entire cohort. Individual neuroticism scores were positively correlated with the neural response in the ventral striatum to increasing gambling risk and negatively correlated with individual risk-taking behaviour. Compared with low-risk twins, the high-risk twins showed a bilateral reduction of risk-related activity in the middle insula extending into the temporal cortex with increasing gambling risk. Post hoc analyses revealed that this effect was strongest in dizygotic twins.LIMITATIONS: The relatively old average age of the mono- and dizygotic twin cohort (49.2 yr) may indicate an increased resilience to affective disorders. The size of the monozygotic high-risk group was relatively small (n = 13).CONCLUSION: The reduced processing of risk magnitude in the middle insula may indicate a deficient integration of exteroceptive information related to risk-related cues with interoceptive states in individuals at familial risk for affective disorders. Impaired risk processing might contribute to increased vulnerability to affective disorders.",
author = "Julian Macoveanu and Kamilla Miskowiak and Kessing, {Lars V} and Maj Vinberg and Siebner, {Hartwig R}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1503/jpn.140220",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "38--47",
journal = "Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience",
issn = "1180-4882",
publisher = "Canadian Medical Association",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Healthy co-twins of patients with affective disorders show reduced risk-related activation of the insula during a monetary gambling task

AU - Macoveanu, Julian

AU - Miskowiak, Kamilla

AU - Kessing, Lars V

AU - Vinberg, Maj

AU - Siebner, Hartwig R

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - BACKGROUND: Healthy first-degree relatives of patients with affective disorders are at increased risk for affective disorders and express discrete structural and functional abnormalities in the brain reward system. However, value-based decision making is not well understood in these at-risk individuals.METHODS: We investigated healthy monozygotic and dizygotic twins with or without a co-twin history of affective disorders (high-risk and low-risk groups, respectively) using functional MRI during a gambling task. We assessed group differences in activity related to gambling risk over the entire brain.RESULTS: We included 30 monozygotic and 37 dizygotic twins in our analysis. Neural activity in the anterior insula and ventral striatum increased linearly with the amount of gambling risk in the entire cohort. Individual neuroticism scores were positively correlated with the neural response in the ventral striatum to increasing gambling risk and negatively correlated with individual risk-taking behaviour. Compared with low-risk twins, the high-risk twins showed a bilateral reduction of risk-related activity in the middle insula extending into the temporal cortex with increasing gambling risk. Post hoc analyses revealed that this effect was strongest in dizygotic twins.LIMITATIONS: The relatively old average age of the mono- and dizygotic twin cohort (49.2 yr) may indicate an increased resilience to affective disorders. The size of the monozygotic high-risk group was relatively small (n = 13).CONCLUSION: The reduced processing of risk magnitude in the middle insula may indicate a deficient integration of exteroceptive information related to risk-related cues with interoceptive states in individuals at familial risk for affective disorders. Impaired risk processing might contribute to increased vulnerability to affective disorders.

AB - BACKGROUND: Healthy first-degree relatives of patients with affective disorders are at increased risk for affective disorders and express discrete structural and functional abnormalities in the brain reward system. However, value-based decision making is not well understood in these at-risk individuals.METHODS: We investigated healthy monozygotic and dizygotic twins with or without a co-twin history of affective disorders (high-risk and low-risk groups, respectively) using functional MRI during a gambling task. We assessed group differences in activity related to gambling risk over the entire brain.RESULTS: We included 30 monozygotic and 37 dizygotic twins in our analysis. Neural activity in the anterior insula and ventral striatum increased linearly with the amount of gambling risk in the entire cohort. Individual neuroticism scores were positively correlated with the neural response in the ventral striatum to increasing gambling risk and negatively correlated with individual risk-taking behaviour. Compared with low-risk twins, the high-risk twins showed a bilateral reduction of risk-related activity in the middle insula extending into the temporal cortex with increasing gambling risk. Post hoc analyses revealed that this effect was strongest in dizygotic twins.LIMITATIONS: The relatively old average age of the mono- and dizygotic twin cohort (49.2 yr) may indicate an increased resilience to affective disorders. The size of the monozygotic high-risk group was relatively small (n = 13).CONCLUSION: The reduced processing of risk magnitude in the middle insula may indicate a deficient integration of exteroceptive information related to risk-related cues with interoceptive states in individuals at familial risk for affective disorders. Impaired risk processing might contribute to increased vulnerability to affective disorders.

U2 - 10.1503/jpn.140220

DO - 10.1503/jpn.140220

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26395812

VL - 41

SP - 38

EP - 47

JO - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience

JF - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience

SN - 1180-4882

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 161245631