Daring to Feel: Emotion-Focused Psychotherapy Increases Amygdala Activation and Connectivity in Euthymic Bipolar Disorder-A Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Kristina Meyer (Shared first author)
  • Catherine Hindi Attar (Shared first author)
  • Jana Fiebig
  • Thomas Stamm
  • Tyler R Bassett
  • Michael Bauer
  • Udo Dannlowski
  • Thomas Ethofer
  • Irina Falkenberg
  • Andreas Jansen
  • Georg Juckel
  • Tilo Kircher
  • Christoph Mulert
  • Gregor Leicht
  • Anne Rau
  • Jonas Rauh
  • Dirk Ritter
  • Philipp Ritter
  • Sarah Trost
  • Christoph Vogelbacher
  • Henrik Walter
  • Sarah Wolter
  • Martin Hautzinger
  • Felix Bermpohl

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In bipolar disorder (BD), the alternation of extreme mood states indicates deficits in emotion processing, accompanied by aberrant neural function of the emotion network. The present study investigated the effects of an emotion-centered psychotherapeutic intervention on amygdala responsivity and connectivity during emotional face processing in BD.

METHODS: In a randomized controlled trial within the multicentric BipoLife project, euthymic patients with BD received one of two interventions over 6 months: an unstructured, emotion-focused intervention (FEST), where patients were guided to adequately perceive and label their emotions (n = 28), or a specific, structured, cognitive behavioral intervention (SEKT) (n = 31). Before and after interventions, functional magnetic resonance imaging was conducted while patients completed an emotional face-matching paradigm (final functional magnetic resonance imaging sample of patients completing both measurements: SEKT, n = 17; FEST, n = 17). Healthy control subjects (n = 32) were scanned twice after the same interval without receiving any intervention. Given the focus of FEST on emotion processing, we expected FEST to strengthen amygdala activation and connectivity.

RESULTS: Clinically, both interventions stabilized patients' euthymic states in terms of affective symptoms. At the neural level, FEST versus SEKT increased amygdala activation and amygdala-insula connectivity at postintervention relative to preintervention time point. In FEST, the increase in amygdala activation was associated with fewer depressive symptoms (r = 0.72) 6 months after intervention.

CONCLUSIONS: Enhanced activation and functional connectivity of the amygdala after FEST versus SEKT may represent a neural marker of improved emotion processing, supporting the FEST intervention as an effective tool in relapse prevention in patients with BD.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2451-9022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 07.2023

Comment Deanary

Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.

PubMed 36898634