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Brain Before Behavior: Temporal Dynamics in the Treatment of Social Anxiety - Neural Changes Occur Early and Precede Clinical Improvement
Stockholm University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, Clinical psychology.
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2018 (English)In: Biological Psychiatry, ISSN 0006-3223, E-ISSN 1873-2402, Vol. 83, no 9, p. S130-S131Article in journal, Meeting abstract (Other academic) Published
Abstract [en]

Background: The brain rapidly responds to affective processing and neural responsivity can separate anxiety disorder patients from healthy individuals. Psychiatric treatment also alters brain responsiveness however, the brain’s temporal dynamics during treatment remain unknown. Here, patients with social anxiety disorder (SAD) were treated with cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) assessments were performed before, during and after intervention.

Methods: Forty-six SAD patients received a 9-week Internet-delivered CBTand symptoms were assessed weekly using the Liebowitz social anxiety scale (LSAS-SR). MRI was acquired at 4 time-points (2 baselines, mid- and post-treatment). Blood-oxygen level-dependent(BOLD-fMRI) was performed while patients viewed negative facial expressions. BOLD-fMRI data was reviewed manually by classifying signal from noise, all subjects contributing with complete data.

Results: Patients improved slightly from baseline to mid-treatment (P<.001, Cohen’s d=0.34) on the LSAS-SR, but more so from mid- to post-treatment (P<.001, d=1.46). Whole-brain neural responsivity decreased from baseline to post-treatment (False Discovery Rate, FDR P<.005) in the medial prefrontal cortex, precuneus and amygdala/parahippocampus. However, no changes (FDR P>.05) from mid- to post-treatment were found, suggesting that the early alterations accounted for the effect. Furthermore, early response reductions were positively associated with symptom improvement from pre-post treatment (Pearson’s r=.50, P<.001).

Conclusions: This is, to our knowledge, the first study assessing early and late psychiatric treatment changes in the brain. Interestingly, altered neural responsivity in limbic and default-mode network regions preceded self-reported alleviation of social anxiety. Understanding the brain’s temporal dynamics and subsequent modification of behavior may be highly important for future clinical neuroimaging research.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2018. Vol. 83, no 9, p. S130-S131
Keywords [en]
social anxiety disorder, BOLD fMRI, cognitive behavior therapy, temporal dynamics, amygdala
National Category
Psychology
Research subject
Psychology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-160601DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.02.341ISI: 000432466300319OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-160601DiVA, id: diva2:1251841
Conference
The 73rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Biological Psychiatry, New York, US, May 10-12, 2018
Available from: 2018-09-28 Created: 2018-09-28 Last updated: 2022-02-26Bibliographically approved

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Månsson, KristofferFischer, Håkan

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