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Deficits in Auditory and Visual Steady-State Responses in Adolescents With Bipolar Disorder Publisher Pubmed



Xiao W1 ; Manyi G1 ; Khaleghi A2
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. School of Humanities and Management, Southwest Medical University, Sichuan Province, Luzhou City, 646000, China
  2. 2. Psychiatry and Psychology Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Source: Journal of Psychiatric Research Published:2022


Abstract

Background: Many aspects of steady-state responses of the brain remain unclear in bipolar disorder (BD) due to the small number of auditory steady-state response (ASSR) studies and the lack of steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) studies on this complex disorder. Therefore, we assessed the patterns of SSVEP and ASSR in adolescents with BD during an active task to detect possible deficits in these important brain responses compared to normal subjects. Methods: 27 adolescents with BD and 30 healthy adolescents were assessed in this study. The blinking background of the monitor presented at 15 Hz and the tone signal stimulation at 40 Hz evoked SSVEPs and ASSRs, respectively. The phase and amplitude of the steady-state responses were calculated in the auditory and visual conditions. Results: Patients exhibited a substantially worse performance in the motor control inhibition task during both auditory and visual modalities. Patients showed increased SSVEP amplitude and phase in the frontal region compared to control adolescents. Also, patients exhibited decreased ASSR amplitude in the prefrontal and increased ASSR amplitude in the right-frontal and centro-parietal areas compared to healthy adolescents. Conclusions: impairments in the production and preservation of SSVEP and ASSR are evident in BD, implicating abnormalities in visual and auditory pathways. Neurophysiological deficits and worse performance in BD adolescents may imply that visual and auditory pathways cannot well transfer the pertinent information from arriving sensory data to the visual and auditory cortices, and the frontal cortex cannot well integrate incoming signals into a unified and coherent perceptual action. © 2022