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Mirror exposure therapy for body image disturbances and eating disorders: A review

Griffen, Trevor C; Naumann, Eva; Hildebrandt, Tom
Mirror exposure therapy is a clinical trial validated treatment component that improves body image and body satisfaction. Mirror exposure therapy has been shown to benefit individuals with high body dissatisfaction and patients with eating disorders (ED) in clinical trials. Mirror exposure is an optional component of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), an effective treatment for body dysmorphic disorder (BDD). However, most clinical trials of mirror exposure therapy have been small or uncontrolled and have included few male subjects. Adverse events have been reported during mirror exposure clinical trials. We discuss how individuals respond when looking in a mirror and how mirrors can be used therapeutically, and we critically evaluate the evidence in favor of mirror exposure therapy. We discuss clinical indications and technical considerations for the use of mirror exposure therapy.
PMID: 30223161
ISSN: 1873-7811
CID: 4789842

Development of a methodology to combine fMRI and EMG to measure emotional responses in patients with anorexia nervosa

Hildebrandt, Tom; Schulz, Kurt; Fleysher, Lazar; Griffen, Trevor; Heywood, Ashley; Sysko, Robyn
OBJECTIVE:Individuals with eating disorders are theorized to have basic impairments in affective appraisal and social-emotional processing that contribute to pathogenesis of the disease. We aimed to determine if facial electromyography could be used to discriminate between happy and disgust emotions during simultaneous acquisition of an fMRI BOLD sequence in efforts to establish a novel tool for investigating emotion-driven hypotheses about eating pathology. In line with standards for rigor and reproducibility, we provide detailed protocols and code to support each step of this project. METHOD:Sixteen adolescents with low-weight eating disorders viewed emotional faces (Happy or Disgust) and were asked to mimic their facial expression during simultaneous BOLD and EMG (Corrugator supercilli, Lavator lavii, Zygomaticus major) acquisition. Trials were repeated with the scanner off and again with scanner on (i.e., fatigue). RESULTS:The Levator and Zygomaticus activation patterns discriminated disgust and happy faces successfully. The pattern held between scanner on and off conditions, but muscle activation attenuated in the Fatigue condition, especially for the Zygomaticus. DISCUSSION:Simultaneous fMRI-EMG is a new tool capable of discriminating specific emotions based on muscle activation patterns and can be leveraged to answer emotion-driven hypotheses about clinical populations characterized by difficulty labeling or processing emotions.
PMID: 30120839
ISSN: 1098-108x
CID: 4789832

Comment on Vitamin D serum levels are cross-sectionally but not prospectively associated with late-life depression [Comment]

Griffen, T C
PMID: 28871593
ISSN: 1600-0447
CID: 4823162

Rapid plasticity of visually evoked responses in rat monocular visual cortex

Griffen, Trevor C; Haley, Melissa S; Fontanini, Alfredo; Maffei, Arianna
Sensory cortical circuits are shaped by experience during sensitive periods in development. In the primary visual cortex (V1) altered visual experience results in changes in visual responsiveness of cortical neurons. The experience-dependent refinement of the circuit in V1 is thought to rely on competitive interactions between feedforward circuits driven by the two eyes. However, recent data have provided evidence for an additional role of cortico-cortical circuits in this process. Indeed, experience-dependent changes in intracortical circuits can be induced rapidly and may result in rapid-onset functional changes. Unilateral occlusion of vision rapidly alters visual responsiveness, synaptic strength and connectivity of local circuits in the binocular region of V1 (V1b), where the inputs from the two eyes converge. In the monocular region of rodent V1 (V1m), where feedforward inputs from the ipsilateral eye are virtually absent, visual deprivation induces rapid plasticity in local circuits; however, functional changes seem to occur only after long periods of deprivation. In V1m there is currently no evidence for functional changes occurring within a time window compatible with that of local circuit plasticity. Here, we probed the visual responsiveness of neurons in rat V1m and assessed the effect of one day unilateral eye lid suture on single neuron visual responses. We report a novel form of plasticity within V1m that occurs on a timescale consistent with the earliest known changes in synaptic strength. Our data provide new insights into how sensory experience can rapidly modulate neuronal responses, even in the absence of direct competition between feedforward thalamocortical inputs.
PMCID:5598998
PMID: 28910338
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 4789822

GABAergic synapses: their plasticity and role in sensory cortex

Griffen, Trevor C; Maffei, Arianna
The mammalian neocortex is composed of a variety of cell types organized in a highly interconnected circuit. GABAergic neurons account for only about 20% of cortical neurons. However, they show widespread connectivity and a high degree of diversity in morphology, location, electrophysiological properties and gene expression. In addition, distinct populations of inhibitory neurons have different sensory response properties, capacities for plasticity and sensitivities to changes in sensory experience. In this review we summarize experimental evidence regarding the properties of GABAergic neurons in primary sensory cortex. We will discuss how distinct GABAergic neurons and different forms of GABAergic inhibitory plasticity may contribute to shaping sensory cortical circuit activity and function.
PMCID:3972456
PMID: 24723851
ISSN: 1662-5102
CID: 4789812

The conserved SKN-1/Nrf2 stress response pathway regulates synaptic function in Caenorhabditis elegans

Staab, Trisha A; Griffen, Trevor C; Corcoran, Connor; Evgrafov, Oleg; Knowles, James A; Sieburth, Derek
The Nrf family of transcription factors plays a critical role in mediating adaptive responses to cellular stress and defends against neurodegeneration, aging, and cancer. Here, we report a novel role for the Caenorhabditis elegans Nrf homolog SKN-1 in regulating synaptic transmission at neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). Activation of SKN-1, either by acute pharmacological treatment with the mitochondrial toxin sodium arsenite or by mutations that cause constitutive SKN-1 activation, results in defects in neuromuscular function. Additionally, elimination of the conserved WD40 repeat protein WDR-23, a principal negative regulator of SKN-1, results in impaired locomotion and synaptic vesicle and neuropeptide release from cholinergic motor axons. Mutations that abolish skn-1 activity restore normal neuromuscular function to wdr-23 mutants and animals treated with toxin. We show that negative regulation of SKN-1 by WDR-23 in the intestine, but not at neuromuscular junctions, is necessary and sufficient for proper neuromuscular function. WDR-23 isoforms differentially localize to the outer membranes of mitochondria and to nuclei, and the effects of WDR-23 on neuromuscular function are dependent on its interaction with cullin E3 ubiquitin ligase. Finally, whole-transcriptome RNA sequencing of wdr-23 mutants reveals an increase in the expression of known SKN-1/Nrf2-regulated stress-response genes, as well as neurotransmission genes not previously implicated in SKN-1/Nrf2 responses. Together, our results indicate that SKN-1/Nrf2 activation may be a mechanism through which cellular stress, detected in one tissue, affects cellular function of a distal tissue through endocrine signaling. These results provide insight into how SKN-1/Nrf2 might protect the nervous system from damage in response to oxidative stress.
PMCID:3605294
PMID: 23555279
ISSN: 1553-7404
CID: 4789802

Developmental regulation of spatio-temporal patterns of cortical circuit activation

Griffen, Trevor C; Wang, Lang; Fontanini, Alfredo; Maffei, Arianna
Neural circuits are refined in an experience-dependent manner during early postnatal development. How development modulates the spatio-temporal propagation of activity through cortical circuits is poorly understood. Here we use voltage-sensitive dye imaging (VSD) to show that there are significant changes in the spatio-temporal patterns of intracortical signals in primary visual cortex (V1) from postnatal day 13 (P13), eye opening, to P28, the peak of the critical period for rodent visual cortical plasticity. Upon direct stimulation of layer 4 (L4), activity spreads to L2/3 and to L5 at all ages. However, while from eye opening to the peak of the critical period, the amplitude and persistence of the voltage signal decrease, peak activation is reached more quickly and the interlaminar gain increases with age. The lateral spread of activation within layers remains unchanged throughout the time window under analysis. These developmental changes in spatio-temporal patterns of intracortical circuit activation are mediated by differences in the contributions of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic components. Our results demonstrate that after eye opening the circuit in V1 is refined through a progression of changes that shape the spatio-temporal patterns of circuit activation. Signals become more efficiently propagated across layers through developmentally regulated changes in interlaminar gain.
PMCID:3539829
PMID: 23316135
ISSN: 1662-5102
CID: 4789792