News | Pediatric Imaging | November 25, 2019

A new study being presented at RSNA explores the functional connectivity of the amygdala

Image by Volker Pietzonka from Pixabay

Image by Volker Pietzonka from Pixabay


November 25, 2019 — Connectivity in an area of the brain that regulates emotion may be altered in infants exposed to opioids while in utero, according to a new study being presented next week at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).

Opioid use in pregnancy has become a major public health crisis. Opioids can have a devastating effect on maternal, fetal and infant health. When babies who have been exposed to opioids in utero are born, they suffer from drug withdrawal, or a group of conditions known as neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS). Exposure to opioids in utero is believed to have lasting consequences on brain development and behavior.

According to the researchers, NAS requires prolonged hospital stays, monitoring and, in severe cases, additional treatment with opioids. Understanding how opioids affect the developing brain would be one of the important steps in early identification and management of NAS and in improving neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes in these children.

"Little is known about brain changes and their relationship to long-term neurological outcomes in infants who are exposed to opioids in utero," said Rupa Radhakrishnan, M.D., assistant professor of radiology and imaging sciences at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis. "Many studies have looked at the impact of long-term opioid use on the adult and adolescent brain, but it is not clear whether social and environmental factors may have influenced those outcomes. By studying infants' brain activity soon after birth, we are in a better position to understand the effect of opioids on the developing brain, and explain how this exposure could influence long-term outcomes in the context of other social and environmental factors."

A team of obstetricians, neonatologists, psychologists and imaging scientists collaborated to study the brains of 16 infants using resting state functional MRI (fMRI), which enables researchers to measure brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow. With resting state fMRI, the connectivity between neural regions — known as resting state networks — can be observed while the brain is at rest.

The research team, led by Radhakrishnan, investigated the functional connectivity of the amygdala, a region responsible for the perception and regulation of emotions such as anger, fear, sadness and aggression.

The study group included 16 full-term infants, including eight exposed to opioids prenatally and eight who were not exposed to prenatal opioids, or opioid naive. Imaging, including fMRI and anatomical MRI, was performed while the infants were naturally asleep.

To determine the participation of the amygdala in the resting state networks, the team created brain maps and applied regions of interest for the left and right amygdala.

"Our early results show significant differences in the way the amygdala connects to different brain regions between the infants exposed to opioids and the opioid-naive infants," Radhakrishnan said. "We still need to study what the clinical implication of this finding may be."

Radhakrishnan said larger and long-term outcome studies are underway to better understand the functional brain changes in prenatal opioid exposure and their associated long-term developmental outcomes.

"Although our early results showed differences between the two groups in a small study sample, it is very important that we further investigate and validate these findings in larger studies," she said. "In order to identify the best methods for managing NAS and improving long-term outcomes in these infants, it is critical to understand changes in brain function that may result from exposure to opioids prenatally."

Co-authors are Nahla Elsaid, Ph.D.Thomas A. Reher, M.D.Andrew J. Saykin, Psy.D.Abbey C. Hines, Psy.D., Izlin Z. Lien, M.D.Emily Scott, M.D.Karmen Yoder, Ph.D., and Yu-Chien Wu, M.D., Ph.D.  

For more information: www.rsna.org


Related Content

News | Radiology Imaging | UC San Diego Health

Oct. 16, 2025 — A strategic collaboration between UC San Diego Health and GE HealthCare will focus on bringing advanced ...

Time October 20, 2025
arrow
News | RSNA 2025

Oct. 7, 2025 — RSNA Ventures, a mission-aligned subsidiary of Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), has ...

Time October 08, 2025
arrow
News | RSNA 2025

Oct. 7, 2025 – Clairity Inc., a leader in AI-based breast cancer risk prediction, will make five scientific ...

Time October 07, 2025
arrow
News | Computed Tomography (CT)

Sept. 26, 2025 — At the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) 2025 annual meeting in San Francisco, Calif ...

Time September 29, 2025
arrow
News | Computed Tomography (CT)

Aug. 26, 2025— Esaote North America, Inc., a provider of dedicated MRI, Ultrasound, and Healthcare IT solutions, has ...

Time August 27, 2025
arrow
News | RSNA

Aug. 13, 2025 — Registration is now open for the RSNA 111th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, the world’s leading ...

Time August 13, 2025
arrow
News | Radiology Imaging

Aug. 12, 2025 – Medical imaging methods such as ultrasound and MRI are often affected by background noise, which can ...

Time August 12, 2025
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

July 22, 2025 — GE HealthCare has topped a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) list of AI-enabled medical device ...

Time July 23, 2025
arrow
News | Prostate Cancer

July 16, 2025 — Artificial intelligence can improve diagnostic consistency and reduce false-positives in prostate cancer ...

Time July 22, 2025
arrow
News | Ultrasound Imaging

July 1, 2025 — UPDATE: The final paper is now available at: JMIR AI - ChatGPT-4–Driven Liver Ultrasound Radiomics ...

Time July 01, 2025
arrow
Subscribe Now