Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2020)

Unaltered Brain GABA Concentrations and Resting fMRI Activity in Functional Dyspepsia With and Without Comorbid Depression

  • Arthur D. P. Mak,
  • Yuen Man Ho,
  • Owen N. W. Leung,
  • Idy Wing Yi Chou,
  • Rashid Lui,
  • Sunny Wong,
  • David K. W. Yeung,
  • Winnie C. W. Chu,
  • Richard Edden,
  • Richard Edden,
  • Sandra Chan,
  • Linda Lam,
  • Justin Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.549749
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundGABA-deficit characterizes depression (MDD), which is highly comorbid with Functional Dyspepsia (FD). We examined brain GABA concentrations and resting activities in post-prandial distress subtype FD (FD-PDS) patients with and without MDD.Methods24 female age/education-matched FD-PDS with comorbid MDD (FD-PDS-MDD), non-depressed FD-PDS, and healthy controls each were compared on GABA concentrations, resting fMRI (fALFF) in bilateral pregenual anterior cingulate (pgACC), left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), insula, and somatosensory cortex (SSC).ResultsFD-PDS-MDD patients had mild though elevated depressive symptoms. FD-PDS patients had generally mild dyspeptic symptoms. No significant between-group differences in GABA or fALFF were found. No significant correlations were found between GABA and depressive/dyspeptic symptoms after Bonferroni correction. In patients, GABA correlated positively with left insula fALFF (r = 0.38, Bonferroni-corrected p = .03).ConclusionWe did not find altered GABA concentrations or brain resting activity in FD-PDS or its MDD comorbidity. The neurochemical link between MDD and FD remains elusive.

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