特里尔社会压力测试
脑血流
心理学
脑岛
压力源
灰质
心率
磁共振成像
体素
焦虑
大脑大小
心脏病学
内科学
医学
神经科学
白质
精神科
血压
放射科
战斗或逃跑反应
基因
化学
生物化学
作者
Marie Uhlig,Janis Reinelt,Mark E. Lauckner,Deniz Kumral,H. Lina Schaare,Toralf Mildner,Anahit Babayan,Harald E. Möller,Veronika Engert,Arno Villringer,Michael Gaebler
出处
期刊:NeuroImage
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2022-11-24
卷期号:265: 119760-119760
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119760
摘要
Stress is an important trigger for brain plasticity: Acute stress can rapidly affect brain activity and functional connectivity, and chronic or pathological stress has been associated with structural brain changes. Measures of structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be modified by short-term motor learning or visual stimulation, suggesting that they also capture rapid brain changes. Here, we investigated volumetric brain changes (together with changes in T1 relaxation rate and cerebral blood flow) after acute stress in humans as well as their relation to psychophysiological stress measures. Sixty-seven healthy men (25.8±2.7 years) completed a standardized psychosocial laboratory stressor (Trier Social Stress Test) or a control version while blood, saliva, heart rate, and psychometrics were sampled. Structural MRI (T1 mapping / MP2RAGE sequence) at 3T was acquired 45 min before and 90 min after intervention onset. Grey matter volume (GMV) changes were analysed using voxel-based morphometry. Associations with endocrine, autonomic, and subjective stress measures were tested with linear models. We found significant group-by-time interactions in several brain clusters including anterior/mid-cingulate cortices and bilateral insula: GMV was increased in the stress group relative to the control group, in which several clusters showed a GMV decrease. We found a significant group-by-time interaction for cerebral blood flow, and a main effect of time for T1 values (longitudinal relaxation time). In addition, GMV changes were significantly associated with state anxiety and heart rate variability changes. Such rapid GMV changes assessed with VBM may be induced by local tissue adaptations to changes in energy demand following neural activity. Our findings suggest that endogenous brain changes are counteracted by acute psychosocial stress, which emphasizes the importance of considering homeodynamic processes and generally highlights the influence of stress on the brain.
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