EEG source analysis in obsessive-compulsive disorder
Résumé
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to assess the activity of intracortical EEG sources in patients with OCD. METHODS: We compared resting state EEG from 50 OCD patients and 50 matched controls using standardized low-resolution electromagnetic tomography (sLORETA) and normative independent component analysis (NICA). Data were analyzed with 1 Hz frequency resolution. Group ICA was used to separate 7 independent components from the control group data. The resulting weights and norms served to derive the same components from the OCD group and to compare their power with controls. RESULTS: In OCD, sLORETA indicated low-frequency power excess (2 - 6 Hz) in the medial frontal cortex, whereas group ICA showed increased low-frequency power in a component reflecting the activity of subgenual anterior cingulate, adjacent limbic structures and to a lesser extent also of lateral frontal cortex. CONCLUSIONS: Both methods provided evidence for medial frontal hyperactivation in OCD. SIGNIFICANCE: Our study is the first to use normative ICA in a clinical sample and indicates its potential utility as a diagnostic tool. The findings provide consistent results based on EEG source localization in OCD and are of practical interest for therapeutic interventions.
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