Resting-state brain activity in major depressive disorder patients and their siblings.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Li Yao | Yu Zhang | Zhen Zhou | Xia Wu | Xin Ma | Chun-Hong Liu | L. Yao | Feng Li | Chuan-Yue Wang | Xia Wu | Zhen Zhou | Chun-hong Liu | Changle Tie | Tingting Fan | Xin Ma | Jie Dong | Yu Zhang | Fu-chun Zhou | Li-jun Li | Sufang Li | Dan-dan Zhang | Jie-Ming Dong | Yong-jun Wang | Feng Li | Chuan-Yue Wang | Yong-Jun Wang | Chang-Le Tie | Su-Fang Li | Dan Zhang | Ting-Ting Fan | Fu-Chun Zhou | Li-Jun Li | Y. Zhang | Chuanyue Wang
[1] Philip R. Szeszko,et al. Amygdala and Hippocampal Volumes in Familial Early Onset Major Depressive Disorder , 2008, Biological Psychiatry.
[2] Xiaoqi Huang,et al. Disrupted Brain Connectivity Networks in Drug-Naive, First-Episode Major Depressive Disorder , 2011, Biological Psychiatry.
[3] Yu-Feng Zang,et al. Altered resting‐state activity in seasonal affective disorder , 2014, Human brain mapping.
[4] S. Rombouts,et al. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience Systems Neuroscience , 2022 .
[5] M. Fox,et al. Spontaneous fluctuations in brain activity observed with functional magnetic resonance imaging , 2007, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[6] Andrew M Blamire,et al. Functional connectivity in late-life depression using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. , 2010, The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry.
[7] M. Raichle,et al. Subgenual prefrontal cortex abnormalities in mood disorders , 1997, Nature.
[8] Vinod Menon,et al. Functional connectivity in the resting brain: A network analysis of the default mode hypothesis , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[9] Marcus E Raichle,et al. Volumetric reduction in left subgenual prefrontal cortex in early onset depression , 2002, Biological Psychiatry.
[10] Yijun Liu,et al. Altered resting-state brain activity at functional MR imaging during the progression of hepatic encephalopathy. , 2012, Radiology.
[11] G. Shulman,et al. Medial prefrontal cortex and self-referential mental activity: Relation to a default mode of brain function , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[12] Naomi B. Pitskel,et al. Three Systems of Insular Functional Connectivity Identified with Cluster Analysis , 2010, Cerebral cortex.
[13] I. Hickie,et al. A systematic review of resting-state functional-MRI studies in major depression. , 2012, Journal of affective disorders.
[14] Alayar Kangarlu,et al. High-field magnetic resonance imaging. , 2009, Neuroimaging clinics of North America.
[15] K. R. Ridderinkhof,et al. Striatum and pre-SMA facilitate decision-making under time pressure , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[16] John Pluta,et al. Test–retest stability analysis of resting brain activity revealed by blood oxygen level‐dependent functional MRI , 2012, Journal of magnetic resonance imaging : JMRI.
[17] Daniella J. Furman,et al. Default-Mode and Task-Positive Network Activity in Major Depressive Disorder: Implications for Adaptive and Maladaptive Rumination , 2011, Biological Psychiatry.
[18] Byung-Joo Ham,et al. Demonstration of decreased gray matter concentration in the midbrain encompassing the dorsal raphe nucleus and the limbic subcortical regions in major depressive disorder: an optimized voxel-based morphometry study. , 2011, Journal of affective disorders.
[19] Gaojun Teng,et al. Regional homogeneity in depression and its relationship with separate depressive symptom clusters: a resting-state fMRI study. , 2009, Journal of affective disorders.
[20] Nikolaos Koutsouleris,et al. Childhood Stress, Serotonin Transporter Gene and Brain Structures in Major Depression , 2010, Neuropsychopharmacology.
[21] Georg Northoff,et al. Is subcortical–cortical midline activity in depression mediated by glutamate and GABA? A cross-species translational approach , 2010, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
[22] G. Northoff,et al. Discovering imaging endophenotypes for major depression , 2011, Molecular Psychiatry.
[23] HighWire Press. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London , 1781, The London Medical Journal.
[24] Raymond C K Chan,et al. Abnormal regional spontaneous neural activity in treatment‐refractory depression revealed by resting‐state fMRI , 2011, Human brain mapping.
[25] Qiyong Gong,et al. High-field magnetic resonance imaging of suicidality in patients with major depressive disorder. , 2010, The American journal of psychiatry.
[26] Mingzhou Ding,et al. Increased Activity Imbalance in Fronto-Subcortical Circuits in Adolescents with Major Depression , 2011, PloS one.
[27] P. McGuffin,et al. A hospital-based twin register of the heritability of DSM-IV unipolar depression. , 1996, Archives of general psychiatry.
[28] P. Cowen,et al. SSRI administration reduces resting state functional connectivity in dorso-medial prefrontal cortex , 2011, Molecular Psychiatry.
[29] Chaozhe Zhu,et al. An improved approach to detection of amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) for resting-state fMRI: Fractional ALFF , 2008, Journal of Neuroscience Methods.
[30] B. Luna. Developmental changes in cognitive control through adolescence. , 2009, Advances in child development and behavior.
[31] Yingli Lu,et al. Regional homogeneity approach to fMRI data analysis , 2004, NeuroImage.
[32] Ying-wei Qiu,et al. Regional homogeneity changes in heroin-dependent individuals: resting-state functional MR imaging study. , 2011, Radiology.
[33] Mario Dzemidzic,et al. Resting state corticolimbic connectivity abnormalities in unmedicated bipolar disorder and unipolar depression , 2009, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging.
[34] J. Shimony,et al. Resting-State fMRI: A Review of Methods and Clinical Applications , 2013, American Journal of Neuroradiology.
[35] Yu-Te Wu,et al. Frontal regional homogeneity increased and temporal regional homogeneity decreased after remission of first-episode drug-naïve major depressive disorder with panic disorder patients under duloxetine therapy for 6 weeks. , 2012, Journal of affective disorders.
[36] Chaozhe Zhu,et al. Amplitude of low frequency fluctuation within visual areas revealed by resting-state functional MRI , 2007, NeuroImage.
[37] Stephen M. Smith,et al. Advances and Pitfalls in the Analysis and Interpretation of Resting-State FMRI Data , 2010, Front. Syst. Neurosci..
[38] G. Glover,et al. Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Major Depression: Abnormally Increased Contributions from Subgenual Cingulate Cortex and Thalamus , 2007, Biological Psychiatry.
[39] Gerd Wagner,et al. Structural brain alterations in patients with major depressive disorder and high risk for suicide: Evidence for a distinct neurobiological entity? , 2011, NeuroImage.
[40] Bharat B. Biswal,et al. The oscillating brain: Complex and reliable , 2010, NeuroImage.
[41] M. Hotopf,et al. Genetic and environmental contributions to depression in Sri Lanka , 2009, British Journal of Psychiatry.
[42] Aapo Hyvärinen,et al. Independent component analysis of nondeterministic fMRI signal sources , 2003, NeuroImage.
[43] R. Elliott,et al. Reduced medial prefrontal responses to social interaction images in remitted depression. , 2012, Archives of general psychiatry.
[44] Xie Bing,et al. Alterations in the cortical thickness and the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder , 2013, Brain Research.
[45] Dick J. Veltman,et al. Amygdala responses to emotional faces in twins discordant or concordant for the risk for anxiety and depression , 2008, NeuroImage.
[46] W. Drevets,et al. Imaging phenotypes of major depressive disorder: genetic correlates , 2009, Neuroscience.
[47] L. Yao,et al. Resting-state abnormal baseline brain activity in unipolar and bipolar depression , 2012, Neuroscience Letters.
[48] M. Thase,et al. Increased Amygdala and Decreased Dorsolateral Prefrontal BOLD Responses in Unipolar Depression: Related and Independent Features , 2007, Biological Psychiatry.
[49] Xi-Nian Zuo,et al. Amplitude of low-frequency oscillations in schizophrenia: A resting state fMRI study , 2010, Schizophrenia Research.
[50] J. P. Hamilton,et al. Investigating neural primacy in Major Depressive Disorder: Multivariate granger causality analysis of resting-state fMRI time-series data , 2010, Molecular Psychiatry.
[51] K. Kendler,et al. A Swedish national twin study of lifetime major depression. , 2006, The American journal of psychiatry.
[52] M. Raichle,et al. A functional anatomical study of unipolar depression , 1992, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[53] J. Gross,et al. The cognitive control of emotion , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[54] Y. Zang,et al. Altered baseline brain activity in children with ADHD revealed by resting-state functional MRI , 2007, Brain and Development.
[55] S. A. Surguladze,et al. Exaggerated neural response to emotional faces in patients with bipolar disorder and their first-degree relatives , 2010, NeuroImage.
[56] Stephen M. Smith,et al. Probabilistic independent component analysis for functional magnetic resonance imaging , 2004, IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging.
[57] W. Drevets,et al. Bipolar and major depressive disorder: Neuroimaging the developmental-degenerative divide , 2009, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
[58] M. Greicius. Resting-state functional connectivity in neuropsychiatric disorders , 2008, Current opinion in neurology.
[59] Chunshui Yu,et al. Increased neural resources recruitment in the intrinsic organization in major depression. , 2010, Journal of affective disorders.
[60] Cheng Xu,et al. Decreased regional homogeneity in insula and cerebellum: A resting-state fMRI study in patients with major depression and subjects at high risk for major depression , 2010, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging.
[61] T. Jernigan,et al. Hippocampal volume changes in healthy subjects at risk of unipolar depression. , 2010, Journal of psychiatric research.
[62] M. Mintun,et al. Resting-state functional MRI in depression unmasks increased connectivity between networks via the dorsal nexus , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[63] Stephen M. Smith,et al. Investigations into resting-state connectivity using independent component analysis , 2005, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[64] Allison C. Nugent,et al. Prefrontal cortical abnormalities in currently depressed versus currently remitted patients with major depressive disorder , 2011, NeuroImage.
[65] Megan M. Filkowski,et al. Subcallosal cingulate deep brain stimulation for treatment-resistant unipolar and bipolar depression. , 2012, Archives of general psychiatry.
[66] J. Price,et al. Glial reduction in the subgenual prefrontal cortex in mood disorders. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[67] M. Lowe,et al. Antidepressant Effect on Connectivity of the Mood-Regulating Circuit: An fMRI Study , 2005, Neuropsychopharmacology.
[68] Xiang Wang,et al. Evidence of a Dissociation Pattern in Resting-State Default Mode Network Connectivity in First-Episode, Treatment-Naive Major Depression Patients , 2012, Biological Psychiatry.
[69] M. Kendall,et al. Rank Correlation Methods , 1949 .
[70] Huafu Chen,et al. fMRI study of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy using amplitude of low‐frequency fluctuation analysis , 2010, Human brain mapping.
[71] Feng Liu,et al. Alterations of the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations in treatment-resistant and treatment-response depression: A resting-state fMRI study , 2012, Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry.
[72] P. Cowen,et al. Affective modulation of anterior cingulate cortex in young people at increased familial risk of depression , 2008, British Journal of Psychiatry.
[73] Peter T Fox,et al. Abnormal resting state corticolimbic blood flow in depressed unmedicated patients with major depression: A 15O‐H2O PET study , 2012, Human brain mapping.
[74] G L Shulman,et al. INAUGURAL ARTICLE by a Recently Elected Academy Member:A default mode of brain function , 2001 .