Magnetoencephalography reveals altered auditory information processing in youth with obsessive-compulsive disorder Article

cited authors

  • Korostenskaja, Milena, Harris, Elana, Giovanetti, Cathy, Horn, Paul, Wang, Yingying, Rose, Douglas, Fujiwara, Hisako, Xiang, Jing

funding text

  • The study was partially supported by a Trustee Grant to Dr. Jing Xiang from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA, and by internal divisional support to Dr. Elana Harris. We would like to thank Dr. David Brown (Audiological Research, Cincinnati Children's Hospital and University of Cincinnati College of Medicine) for providing references to our manuscript. We also would like to express our gratitude to Nat Hemasilpin and Elijah Kirtman for their technical assistance in MEG recordings.

abstract

  • Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) often report sensory intolerances which may lead to significant functional impairment. This study used auditory evoked fields (AEFs) to address the question of whether neural correlates of sensory auditory information processing differ in youth with OCD compared with healthy comparison subjects (HCS). AEFs, recorded with a whole head 275-channel magnetoencephalography system, were elicited in response to binaural auditory stimuli from 10 pediatric subjects with OCD (ages 8-13, mean 11 years, 6 males) and 10 age- and gender-matched HCS. Three major neuromagnetic responses were studied: M70 (60-80 ms), M100 (90-120 ms), and M150 (130-190 ms). When compared with HCS, subjects with OCD demonstrated delayed latency of the M100 response. In subjects with OCD the amplitude of the M100 and M150 responses was significantly greater in the right hemisphere compared with the left hemisphere. Current results suggest that when compared with HCS, subjects with OCD have altered auditory information processing, evident from the delayed latency of the M100 response, which is thought to be associated with the encoding of physical stimulus characteristics. Interhemispheric asymmetry with increased M100 and M150 amplitudes over the right hemisphere compared with the left hemisphere was found in young OCD subjects. These results should be interpreted with caution due to the high variability rate of responses in both HCS and OCD subjects, as well as the possible effect of medication in OCD subjects. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Publication Date

  • May 30, 2013

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start page

  • 132

end page

  • 140

volume

  • 212

issue

  • 2

WoS Citations

  • 1

WoS References

  • 75