Brain arousal regulation in SSRI-medicated patients with major depression

Publication date: Available online 3 November 2018Source: Journal of Psychiatric ResearchAuthor(s): Christine Ulke, Dirk A. Wittekind, Janek Spada, Katharina Franik, Philippe Jawinski, Tilman Hensch, Ulrich HegerlAbstractEEG measures of arousal have been suggested as diagnostic and predictive biomarkers for major depression. The aim of the present study was to examine whether self-rated depression severity in SSRI-medicated patients with major depression (MD) is associated with EEG measures of brain arousal. Based on previous studies, we expected that a higher level of brain arousal and a slower arousal decline during a 15-min EEG recording are associated with higher symptom severity as assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) at the time of the EEG recording. EEGs of 78 MD patients and 46 healthy controls were analyzed. Brain arousal was assessed using the Vigilance Algorithm Leipzig (VIGALL 2.1). Based on automatically classified 1-s segments (EEG-vigilance Stages 0, A1, A2, A3, B1, B2/3 or C) we computed indices to assess the level (mean EEG-vigilance) and the decline of arousal (slope index) during the 15-min resting state EEG under eyes-closed condition. We found that a higher arousal level and a slower arousal decline corresponded to higher severity of depressive symptoms (rho = 0.238, p = .018; and rho = 0.236; p = .019). Self-rated non-remitters (BDI>12) had a higher arousal level (mean EEG-vigilance: t76 = −2.19, p = .016) and slowe...
Source: Journal of Psychiatric Research - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research