youth

Brain regions involved in ‘mentalizing’ process vocal emotions differently in youth with epilepsy

Previous research has found that youth with epilepsy are at risk for poorer social and relational outcomes. Although this is not true of everyone with epilepsy, many children and adolescents with this neurodevelopmental disorder report having a hard time making and maintaining friendships. Perhaps related to this, youth with epilepsy often also struggle to interpret others’ emotions: they tend to be less accurate than youth without epilepsy on emotion recognition tasks, where people are asked to identify the intended emotion in facial or vocal expressions. Why might this be? Some researchers have suggested that the brains of youth with epilepsy may respond differently to emotional faces, compared to youth without epilepsy. Could something similar be happening with emotional voices?

To answer this question, the current study recruited youth who had been diagnosed with intractable epilepsy (meaning they still experienced seizures despite taking medication to prevent them), and some who had not. Participants were asked to listen to recordings of emotional voices (e.g., angry voices, fearful voices, etc.) while they were in an MRI scanner. After each recording, participants were asked to indicate what emotion they thought was being expressed. We examined how accurate they were at determining the intended emotion in each recording, and how their brains responded to the different types of voices.

We found that youth with epilepsy were less accurate than youth without epilepsy on this vocal emotion recognition task—especially at younger ages. In addition, we found six regions of the brain that responded differently to the emotional voices in youth with vs. without epilepsy. Activation patterns in these areas (including regions like the right temporo-parietal junction, the right hippocampus, and the right medial prefrontal cortex) could actually predict whether any given participant had been diagnosed with epilepsy or not. Interestingly, many of these six regions are often found to be involved in ‘mentalizing tasks’, where participants are asked to make judgments about others’ emotions, thoughts, and beliefs. Our findings suggest that these brain areas might be responding differently when trying to interpret others’ emotions (based on their tone of voice) in youth with epilepsy. We don’t yet know whether these different patterns of activation are actually related to emotion recognition accuracy, or to social difficulties; they could simply reflect an alternative “strategy” when processing vocal emotional cues. Although more research is needed to determine this, our findings contribute to our understanding of how neurodiverse brains process social and emotional information.

Brain characteristics associated with symptoms of anxiety/depression in youth with epilepsy

lonely-1822414_1920.jpg

Compared to the general population or to other groups of people with chronic health conditions, individuals with epilepsy are more likely to also experience internalizing disorders (i.e., depression and/or anxiety) during their lifetime. In adults, these comorbid conditions are thought to be indexed by specific neural biomarkers, including irregularities in the structure and function of frontal and temporal regions of the brain. However, less work has investigated whether similar patterns may be noted in children and adolescents with epilepsy, who are at risk of developing depression and/or anxiety. The current study capitalized on the fact that youth with epilepsy often undergo MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans, PET (positron emission tomography) scans, and psychological assessments as part of their clinical evaluations. We examined whether youth with epilepsy who experienced clinically-significant levels of internalizing problems had different patterns of brain structure and/or function than youth who scored in the normal range for such symptoms. We found that 42% of youth in our sample scored in the clinical range for internalizing symptoms on a parent-report of psychological well-being (Child Behavior Checklist; Achenbach, 2001)—suggesting that anxiety and depression may be a common concern for many young patients. Symptoms were not predicted by characteristics of the illness (like age of seizure onset or location of seizure focus) nor of the patient (like age or gender). However, youth in the clinical range showed reduced cortical volume overall, as well as cortical thinning and decreased function (measured via glucose reuptake) in bilateral parietal/occipital lobes and left temporal regions, compared to youth in the normal range. A follow-up classifier analysis demonstrated that these brain characteristics were predictive of internalizing problems at an individual level. Taken together, our findings suggest that children and adolescents with epilepsy who show widespread reductions in cortical thickness and neural function in clinical evaluations may benefit from intensified psychological evaluation and support for possible mood and anxiety symptoms.

Read more at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31882324