Background: The goal of the present study is to identify the effect of nicotine on auditory automatic processing, as reflected by mismatch negativity (MMN), in nonsmoking schizophrenic patients. Methods: Ten nonsmoking schizophrenic patients and 10 healthy volunteers underwent a reference session and 2 test sessions. The test sessions involved administration of a placebo patch and a nicotine skin patch, which were counterbalanced. Nicotine was administered transdermally under controlled dosage. Results: Nicotine administration shortened the MMN latencies (at Fz on nicotine/placebo: 134.8 ± 5.7/157.6 ± 6.4 ms) in healthy volunteers. In contrast, there were no significant differences in MMN latencies in schizophrenic patients (169.6 ± 5.7/165.0 ± 6.4 ms). Conclusion: Nicotine activates and accelerates preattentive and automatic processing in healthy controls, whereas there were no such effects observed in nonsmoking patients. The impaired MMN response to nicotine administration in nonsmoking schizophrenic patients may be attributed to low nicotinic receptor function, implicated in dysregulation of the glutamatergic system.
Objective
The aims of the present study were to examine the effects of short-term music interventions among patients with fibromyalgia (FM) and to clarify the alterations in functional connectivity and persistent pain.
Design
Pilot study.
Setting
All participants were evaluated at Juntendo University from November 2017 to January 2019.
Subjects
We enrolled female patients who had been clinically diagnosed with FM (N = 23).
Methods
All participants listened to Mozart’s Duo for Violin and Viola No. 1, K. 423, in a quiet room for 17 minutes. We compared the degree of pain using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging and the numeric rating scale before and after listening to music.
Results
Pain scores were significantly reduced after listening to music. Further, we observed there was a significant difference in connectivity between the right insular cortex (IC) and posterior cingulate cortex (PCC)/precuneus (PCu) before and after listening to music. We also found that the difference between the right IC-PCu connectivity and the difference in pain scores were significantly correlated.
Conclusions
We found that a short period of music intervention reduced chronic pain and altered functional IC–default mode network connectivity. Furthermore, music potentially normalized the neural network via IC–default mode network connectivity, yielding temporary pain relief in patients with FM. Further longitudinal studies with larger sample sizes are required to confirm these results.
Background: Aberrant functional connectivity (FC) is increasingly implicated in the clinical phenomenology of schizophrenia. This study focused on the FC of the cortico-striatal network, which is thought to be disrupted in schizophrenia and to contribute to its clinical manifestations. Methods: We used simultaneous resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG) recordings to investigate FC in patients with schizophrenia. The study included 20 patients with schizophrenia and 20 healthy controls (HCs). Simultaneously recorded rsfMRI and EEG data were collected with an MR-compatible amplifier, and rsfMRI data were analyzed with the CONN toolbox to calculate FC. The study focused on the caudate, which was defined as the seed. We also performed between-group comparisons of standardized low-resolution electromagnetic tomography intracortical lagged coherence for each EEG frequency band. Results: Compared to HCs, patients with schizophrenia showed enhanced FC between the caudate nucleus and the posterior cingulate cortex, temporal, and occipital regions on rsfMRI. It is thus possible that HCs have negative FC between these regions, whereas patients with schizophrenia have non-negative FC. The EEG results showed no significant differences in oscillations or in FC between the groups in any frequency band in any region. Conclusions: Increased FC in the caudate may represent aberrant between-network FC resulting from the disruption of segregation between networks.
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