Irritable bowel syndrome in women: Association between decreased insular subregion volumes and gastrointestinal symptoms

•All insular subregions are smaller in IBS compared to healthy women.•Insular volume associates with GI symptoms independent of psychiatric comorbidity.•GI symptoms associate with anterior but not posterior insular volume.•More nausea associated with smaller dorsal anterior insula bilaterally.•Insul...

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Published inNeuroImage clinical Vol. 35; p. 103128
Main Authors Barazanji, Nawroz, Paul Hamilton, J., Icenhour, Adriane, Simon, Rozalyn A., Bednarska, Olga, Tapper, Sofie, Tisell, Anders, Lundberg, Peter, Engström, Maria, Walter, Susanna
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.01.2022
Elsevier
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Summary:•All insular subregions are smaller in IBS compared to healthy women.•Insular volume associates with GI symptoms independent of psychiatric comorbidity.•GI symptoms associate with anterior but not posterior insular volume.•More nausea associated with smaller dorsal anterior insula bilaterally.•Insula in major depression is not significantly smaller than in healthy women. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic pain disorder characterized by disturbed interactions between the gut and the brain with depression as a common comorbidity. In both IBS and depression, structural brain alterations of the insular cortices, key structures for pain processing and interoception, have been demonstrated but the specificity of these findings remains unclear. We compared the gray matter volume (GMV) of insular cortex (IC) subregions in IBS women and healthy controls (HC) and examined relations to gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and glutamate + glutamine (Glx) concentrations. We further analyzed GMV of IC subregions in women with major depression (MDD) compared to HC and addressed possible differences between depression, IBS, IBS with depression and HC. Women with IBS (n = 75), MDD (n = 41) and their respective HC (n = 39 and n = 43) underwent structural brain MRI. IC subregion volumes were estimated using statistical parametric mapping software. General linear model approaches were applied to IC volumetric data and FDR-corrected partial correlation analyses assessed relations between GMV, GI symptoms and Glx concentrations. IBS patients had significantly smaller IC subregions than HC in both hemispheres but there was no significant difference between MDD compared with IBS and HC for any insular subregion. In IBS, the dorsal anterior insular volumes were negatively correlated with symptoms of nausea and pain, and the left ventral subregion showed a positive correlation with straining to defecate, while the posterior subregion volumes showed no relation to symptoms. In the anterior insula, concentration of Glx showed positive correlations with GMV bilaterally in HC and with GMV of the right anterior insula in IBS. As the interoceptive cortex, the insula shows substantial and disease-specific structural differences in patients with chronic interoceptive visceral pain. Particularly changes in the anterior proportions might be related to chronic exposure to or enhanced salience towards adverse interoceptive visceral signals and could be linked to biochemical changes, calling for further multimodal and longitudinal work.
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ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103128