Spatial working memory deficits in obsessive compulsive disorder are associated with excessive engagement of the medial frontal cortex

Nic J. A. van der Wee, Nick F. Ramsey, Johan M. Jansma, Damiaan A. Denys, Harold J. G. M. van Megen, Herman M. G. Westenberg, René S. Kahn

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117 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is associated with a specific deficit in spatial working memory, especially when task difficulty (i.e., working memory load) is high. It is not clear whether this deficit is associated with dysfunction of the brain system that subserves spatial working memory, or whether it is associated with a more generalized effect on executive functions. In contrast to studies in healthy volunteers and schizophrenia, spatial working memory in OCD has not been investigated before using functional neuroimaging techniques. We conducted a functional MRI study in 11 treatment-free female patients with OCD and 11 for sex-, age-, education-, and handedness pairwise-matched healthy controls in order to assess performance on a parametric spatial n-back task as well as the underlying neuronal substrate and its dynamics. Patients with OCD performed poorly at the highest level of task difficulty and engaged the same set of brain regions as the matched healthy controls. In this set, the effect of difficulty on magnitude of brain activity was the same in patients and in controls except for a region covering the anterior cingulate cortex. In this region activity was significantly elevated in patients with OCD at all levels of the parametric task. These findings do not provide evidence for a deficit of the spatial working memory system proper, but suggest that the abnormal performance pattern may be secondary to another aspect of executive dysfunctioning in OCD
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2271-2280
JournalNEUROIMAGE
Volume20
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2003

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