A single dose of fluoxetine reduces neural limbic responses to anger in depressed adolescents
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Date
2019-01-21Author
Capitao, Liliana
Chapman, Robert
Murphy, Susannah E
James, Anthony
Cowen, Philip J
Harmer, Catherine J
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Capitão, Liliana P; Chapman, Robert; Murphy, Susannah E; Harvey, Christopher-James; James, Anthony; Cowen, Philip J; Harmer, Catherine A single dose of fluoxetine reduces neural limbic responses to anger in depressed adolescents.Translational Psychiatry 2019 (9): 30
Abstract
Depression in adolescence is frequently characterised by symptoms of irritability. Fluoxetine is the antidepressant with
the most favourable benefit:risk ratio profile to treat adolescent depression, but the neural mechanisms underlying
antidepressant drugs in the young brain are still poorly understood. Previous studies have characterised the neural
effects of long-term fluoxetine treatment in depressed adolescents, but these are limited by concurrent mood
changes and a lack of placebo control. There is also recent evidence suggesting that fluoxetine reduces the processing
of anger in young healthy volunteers, which is consistent with its effect for the treatment of irritability in this age
group, but this remains to be investigated in depressed adolescents. Here we assessed the effects of a single, first dose
of 10mg fluoxetine vs. placebo on neural response to anger cues using fMRI in a sample of adolescents with Major
Depressive Disorder (MDD) who had been recently prescribed fluoxetine. As predicted, adolescents receiving
fluoxetine showed reduced activity in response to angry facial expressions in the amygdala-hippocampal region
relative to placebo. Activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) was also increased. No changes in symptoms
were observed. These results demonstrate, for the first time in depressed adolescents, that fluoxetine has immediate
neural effects on core components of the cortico-limbic circuitry prior to clinical changes in mood. The effect on anger
is consistent with our previous work and could represent a key mechanism through which fluoxetine may act to
alleviate irritability symptoms in adolescent depression.
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