NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2021)

Motor-related oscillatory activity in schizophrenia according to phase of illness and clinical symptom severity

  • Lauren E. Gascoyne,
  • Matthew J. Brookes,
  • Mohanbabu Rathnaiah,
  • Mohammad Zia Ul Haq Katshu,
  • Loes Koelewijn,
  • Gemma Williams,
  • Jyothika Kumar,
  • James T.R. Walters,
  • Zelekha A. Seedat,
  • Lena Palaniyappan,
  • J.F. William Deakin,
  • Krish D. Singh,
  • Peter F. Liddle,
  • Peter G. Morris

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
p. 102524

Abstract

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Magnetoencephalography (MEG) measures magnetic fields generated by synchronised neural current flow and provides direct inference on brain electrophysiology and connectivity, with high spatial and temporal resolution. The movement-related beta decrease (MRBD) and the post-movement beta rebound (PMBR) are well-characterised effects in magnetoencephalography (MEG), with the latter having been shown to relate to long-range network integrity. Our previous work has shown that the PMBR is diminished (relative to controls) in a group of schizophrenia patients. However, little is known about how this effect might differ in patients at different stages of illness and degrees of clinical severity. Here, we extend our previous findings showing that the MEG derived PMBR abnormality in schizophrenia exists in 29 recent-onset and 35 established cases (i.e., chronic patients), compared to 42 control cases. In established cases, PMBR is negatively correlated with severity of disorganization symptoms. Further, using a hidden Markov model analysis, we show that transient pan-spectral oscillatory ”bursts”, which underlie the PMBR, differ between healthy controls and patients. Results corroborate that PMBR is associated with disorganization of mental activity in schizophrenia.

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