Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Apr 2019)

Erroneously Disgusted: fMRI Study Supports Disgust-Related Neural Reuse in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

  • Kathrin Viol,
  • Kathrin Viol,
  • Benjamin Aas,
  • Benjamin Aas,
  • Anna Kastinger,
  • Anna Kastinger,
  • Martin Kronbichler,
  • Martin Kronbichler,
  • Helmut Johannes Schöller,
  • Helmut Johannes Schöller,
  • Eva-Maria Reiter,
  • Eva-Maria Reiter,
  • Sarah Said-Yürekli,
  • Sarah Said-Yürekli,
  • Sarah Said-Yürekli,
  • Lisa Kronbichler,
  • Lisa Kronbichler,
  • Brigitte Kravanja-Spannberger,
  • Barbara Stöger-Schmidinger,
  • Wolfgang Aichhorn,
  • Wolfgang Aichhorn,
  • Guenter Karl Schiepek,
  • Guenter Karl Schiepek,
  • Guenter Karl Schiepek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Objective: fMRI scans of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) consistently show a hyperactivity of the insular cortex, a region responsible for disgust-processing, when confronted with symptom-triggering stimuli. This asks for an investigation of the role of disgust and the insula in OCD patients.Methods: Seventeen inpatients with OCD and 17 healthy controls (HC) underwent fMRI scanning. Whole-brain contrasts were calculated for “Disgust vs. Neutral” for both groups, plus an analysis of variance (ANOVA) to assess the interaction between group and condition. Additionally, the emotional dimensions of valence and arousal, along with the ability to cope, were assessed by picture ratings.Results: The picture ratings confirmed the patients’ heightened sensitivity to disgust with higher values for arousal and inability to cope, but not for valence. fMRI scans revealed no hyperactivity of the insula in patients compared to controls for the condition “Disgust vs. Neutral,” indicating no basic hypersensitivity to disgusting stimuli. Increased activity in the precuneus in controls for this condition might correspond to the downregulation of arousal.Conclusions: The absent differences in neural activity of the insula in patients compared to controls for the disgust-condition, but heightened activity for symptom-provoking conditions, suggests that the illness is due to an erroneous recruitment of the insula cortex for OCD-stimuli. The finding is interpreted within the framework of the neural reuse hypothesis.

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