Alterations in resting-state global brain connectivity in bipolar I disorder patients with prior suicide attempt

  • Xiaofang Cheng
  • , Jianshan Chen
  • , Xiaofei Zhang
  • , Yihe Zhang
  • , Qiuxia Wu
  • , Qing Ma
  • , Jiaqi Sun
  • , Wenjin Zou
  • , Taifeng Lin
  • , Liangda Zhong
  • , Wenhao Deng
  • , Xiaoyi Sun
  • , Liqian Cui
  • , Xiongchao Cheng
  • , Yingmei Chen
  • , Yinglian Cai
  • , Chaodun Zheng
  • , Daomeng Cheng
  • , Chanjuan Yang
  • , Biyu Ye
  • Xiangyang Zhang, Xinhua Wei*, Liping Cao*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Bipolar I disorder (BD-I) is associated with a high risk of suicide attempt; however, the neural circuit dysfunction that confers suicidal vulnerability in individuals with this disorder remains largely unknown. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) allows non-invasive mapping of brain functional connectivity. The current study used an unbiased voxel-based graph theory analysis of rs-fMRI to investigate the intrinsic brain networks of BD-I patients with and without suicide attempt. Methods: A total of 30 BD-I patients with suicide attempt (attempter group), 82 patients without suicide attempt (non-attempter group), and 67 healthy controls underwent rs-fMRI scan, and then global brain connectivity (GBC) was computed as the sum of connections of each voxel with all other gray matter voxels in the brain. Results: Compared with the non-attempter group, we found regional differences in GBC values in emotion-encoding circuits, including the left superior temporal gyrus, bilateral insula/rolandic operculum, and right precuneus (PCu)/cuneus in the bipolar disorder (BD) attempter group, and these disrupted hub-like regions displayed fair to good power in distinguishing attempters from non-attempters among BD-I patients. GBC values of the right PCu/cuneus were positively correlated with illness duration and education in the attempter group. Conclusions: Our results indicate that abnormal connectivity patterns in emotion-encoding circuits are associated with the increasing risk of vulnerability to suicide attempt in BD patients, and global dysconnectivity across these emotion-encoding circuits might serve as potential biomarkers for classification of suicide attempt in BD patients.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)474-486
Number of pages13
JournalBipolar Disorders
Volume23
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • bipolar disorder
  • global brain connectivity
  • precuneus
  • resting state
  • suicide

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