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Keywords
(11)
Brain Activation
Cortisol
Data Analysis
Emotional Memory
Free Recall
Glucocorticoids
Human Animation
Number of Factors
Performance Assessment
Prefrontal Cortex
Repeated Measures
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Cortisol’s effects on hippocampal activation in depressed patients are related to alterations in memory formation
Cortisol’s effects on hippocampal activation in depressed patients are related to alterations in memory formation,10.1016/j.jpsychires.2010.10.005,Jou
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Cortisol’s effects on hippocampal activation in depressed patients are related to alterations in memory formation
(
Citations: 1
)
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Heather C. Abercrombie
,
Allison L. Jahn
,
Richard J. Davidson
,
Simone Kern
,
Clemens Kirschbaum
,
Jerry Halverson
Many investigators have hypothesized that brain response to
cortisol
is altered in depression. However, neural activation in response to exogenously manipulated
cortisol
elevations has not yet been directly examined in depressed humans. Animal research shows that
glucocorticoids
have robust effects on hippocampal function, and can either enhance or suppress neuroplastic events in the hippocampus depending on a number of factors. We hypothesized that depressed individuals would show 1) altered hippocampal response to exogenous administration of cortisol, and 2) altered effects of
cortisol
on learning. In a repeated-measures design, 19 unmedicated depressed and 41 healthy individuals completed two fMRI scans. Fifteen mg oral hydrocortisone (i.e., cortisol) or placebo (order randomized and double-blind) was administered 1 h prior to encoding of emotional and neutral words during fMRI scans.
Data analysis
examined the effects of
cortisol
administration on 1)
brain activation
during encoding, and 2) subsequent
free recall
for words.
Cortisol
affected subsequent recall performance in depressed but not healthy individuals. We found alterations in hippocampal response to
cortisol
in depressed women, but not in depressed men (who showed altered response to
cortisol
in other regions, including subgenual prefrontal cortex). In both depressed men and women, cortisol’s effects on hippocampal function were positively correlated with its effects on recall performance assessed days later. Our data provide evidence that in depressed compared to healthy women, cortisol’s effects on hippocampal function are altered. Our data also show that in both depressed men and women, cortisol’s effects on
emotional memory
formation and hippocampal function are related.
Journal:
Journal of Psychiatric Research
, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 15-23, 2011
DOI:
10.1016/j.jpsychires.2010.10.005
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Citations
(1)
Prior storage conditions and loading rate affect the in vitro fracture response of spinal segments under impact loading
S. Dudli
,
D. Haschtmann
,
S. J. Ferguson
Journal:
Journal of Biomechanics - J BIOMECH
, vol. 44, no. 13, pp. 2351-2355, 2011