Scientific Institute IRCCS 'E. Medea'
Child Psychiatry Department
Tenured, full-time researcher, Child Psychopathology Unit, Scientific Institute, IRCCS Eugenio Medea, Bosisio Parini, Lecco, Italy; Psychologist, Psychotherapist in "Developmental neuropsychology: psychodiagnostics and planning of rehabilitative and psychotherapeutic treatments", PhD in Experimental Psychology, Linguistics and Cognitive Neuroscience.

Moderator of 1 Session

Session Type
Research
Date
Mon, 06.06.2022
Session Time
15:00 - 16:30
Room
Hall D
Session Description
Organised by the EPA Section on Neuroimaging. Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) is an optical technique that, using light at specific wavelengths, allows to probe changes in oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin cortical concentration over time. In the last two decades, fNIRS has been widely used in the study of neuro cortical correlates of cognition and emotional processing, due to several advantages it offers over other neuroimaging modalities. In particular, fNIRS is harmless, tolerant to body movements, and highly portable, which makes it particularly suitable for subjects with different psychiatric disorders that present difficulty staying still. In the light of these premises, in this symposium the speakers will discuss present and future prospects of fNIRS for assessing cerebral cortex function in several typical and atypical conditions, from childhood to adulthood, providing examples of applications using different cognitive and emotional tasks.
Session Icon
Fully Live, Section

Presenter of 1 Presentation

NIRS Hemodynamic Response to Methylphenidate in Children with Attention Aeficit Hyperactivity Disorder: First Administration, Titration Phase and Associations with Clinical Severity.

Session Type
Research
Date
Mon, 06.06.2022
Session Time
15:00 - 16:30
Room
Hall D
Session Icon
Fully Live, Section
Lecture Time
15:50 - 16:07

Abstract

Abstract Body

Introduction:
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by lack of self-regulation and deficits in organizing behaviors in response to emotional stimuli. Methylphenidate (MPH) is one of the most effective psychostimulant drugs for ADHD, however, a possible predictive utility of brain hemodynamic data related to MPH administration and its relation to clinical symptomatology is still not clear. To address these questions, we used Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) technology, a non-invasive optical technique that allows to investigate the effect of psychopharmacological treatment on cortical hemodynamics.
Methods:
Twenty children with ADHD underwent a three-waves study and 25 healthy controls were recruited at W1. At W2 children with ADHD received first MPH administration and at W3 they reached the titration phase. At each phase children performed - during NIRS recording - an emotional continuous performance task with visual stimuli of different emotional content. Clinical data were also collected at W1 and W3. We investigated the relationship among the difference between NIRS activation at W2 and W1 (Delta1) and W3 and W2 (Delta2), for each subject, task condition and brain region. Lastly, we investigated correlations between the Delta1 and clinical symptomatology indexes at W1 and between Delta2 and clinical data at W3.
Conclusions:
Our study results suggest that hemodynamic changes in right prefrontal region probably induced by first MPH administration could predict hemodynamic changes related to MPH titration phase. These biological indexes could be associated to clinical evidences related not only to core ADHD symptoms but also to affective correlates.

Hide