Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder

Abstract Background Obesity and major depressive disorder (MDD) independently contribute to memory impairment. Little is known about shared neural mechanisms that may result in the cognitive impairment experienced by these populations. This study's aim was to determine how obesity impacts neura...

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Main Authors: Maria R. Restivo, Geoffrey B. Hall, Benicio N. Frey, Margaret C. McKinnon, Valerie H. Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-12-01
Series:Brain and Behavior
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1848
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spelling doaj-850c4ef3542b45c498d1e279ee1866ee2021-03-10T17:10:35ZengWileyBrain and Behavior2162-32792020-12-011012n/an/a10.1002/brb3.1848Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorderMaria R. Restivo0Geoffrey B. Hall1Benicio N. Frey2Margaret C. McKinnon3Valerie H. Taylor4Women’s College Research Institute Women’s College Hospital Toronto ON CanadaDepartment of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour McMaster University Hamilton ON CanadaDepartment of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences McMaster University Hamilton ON CanadaDepartment of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences McMaster University Hamilton ON CanadaDepartment of Psychiatry University of Calgary Calgary AB CanadaAbstract Background Obesity and major depressive disorder (MDD) independently contribute to memory impairment. Little is known about shared neural mechanisms that may result in the cognitive impairment experienced by these populations. This study's aim was to determine how obesity impacts neural activity during a verbal recognition memory task in individuals both with and without MDD. Methods Functional magnetic resonance imaging was employed to examine whether differences in neural activation patterns would be seen across three groups during the Warrington's Recognition Memory Test. Three study groups are reported: 20 subjects with obesity but without MDD (bariatric controls), 23 subjects with past or current MDD and obesity, and 20 normal BMI controls (healthy controls). Results Three‐group conjunction analyses indicated that overlapping neural regions were activated during both encoding and retrieval processes across all groups. However, second‐level 2‐group t‐contrasts indicated that neural activation patterns differed when comparing healthy and bariatric controls, and when comparing bariatric controls and bariatric MDD participants. Discussion Results indicate that obesity in conjunction with MDD confers a subtle impact on neural functioning. Given high rates of obesity and MDD comorbidity, and the role of cognition on ability to return to premorbid level of functioning, this association should inform treatment decisions.https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1848cognitiondepressionfMRImemoryneural activationobesity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria R. Restivo
Geoffrey B. Hall
Benicio N. Frey
Margaret C. McKinnon
Valerie H. Taylor
spellingShingle Maria R. Restivo
Geoffrey B. Hall
Benicio N. Frey
Margaret C. McKinnon
Valerie H. Taylor
Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
Brain and Behavior
cognition
depression
fMRI
memory
neural activation
obesity
author_facet Maria R. Restivo
Geoffrey B. Hall
Benicio N. Frey
Margaret C. McKinnon
Valerie H. Taylor
author_sort Maria R. Restivo
title Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
title_short Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
title_full Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
title_fullStr Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
title_full_unstemmed Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
title_sort neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder
publisher Wiley
series Brain and Behavior
issn 2162-3279
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Background Obesity and major depressive disorder (MDD) independently contribute to memory impairment. Little is known about shared neural mechanisms that may result in the cognitive impairment experienced by these populations. This study's aim was to determine how obesity impacts neural activity during a verbal recognition memory task in individuals both with and without MDD. Methods Functional magnetic resonance imaging was employed to examine whether differences in neural activation patterns would be seen across three groups during the Warrington's Recognition Memory Test. Three study groups are reported: 20 subjects with obesity but without MDD (bariatric controls), 23 subjects with past or current MDD and obesity, and 20 normal BMI controls (healthy controls). Results Three‐group conjunction analyses indicated that overlapping neural regions were activated during both encoding and retrieval processes across all groups. However, second‐level 2‐group t‐contrasts indicated that neural activation patterns differed when comparing healthy and bariatric controls, and when comparing bariatric controls and bariatric MDD participants. Discussion Results indicate that obesity in conjunction with MDD confers a subtle impact on neural functioning. Given high rates of obesity and MDD comorbidity, and the role of cognition on ability to return to premorbid level of functioning, this association should inform treatment decisions.
topic cognition
depression
fMRI
memory
neural activation
obesity
url https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1848
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