1,922 research outputs found

    Grey-matter texture abnormalities and reduced hippocampal volume are distinguishing features of schizophrenia

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    Neurodevelopmental processes are widely believed to underlie schizophrenia. Analysis of brain texture from conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can detect disturbance in brain cytoarchitecture. We tested the hypothesis that patients with schizophrenia manifest quantitative differences in brain texture that, alongside discrete volumetric changes, may serve as an endophenotypic biomarker. Texture analysis (TA) of grey matter distribution and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) of regional brain volumes were applied to MRI scans of 27 patients with schizophrenia and 24 controls. Texture parameters (uniformity and entropy) were also used as covariates in VBM analyses to test for correspondence with regional brain volume. Linear discriminant analysis tested if texture and volumetric data predicted diagnostic group membership (schizophrenia or control). We found that uniformity and entropy of grey matter differed significantly between individuals with schizophrenia and controls at the fine spatial scale (filter width below 2 mm). Within the schizophrenia group, these texture parameters correlated with volumes of the left hippocampus, right amygdala and cerebellum. The best predictor of diagnostic group membership was the combination of fine texture heterogeneity and left hippocampal size. This study highlights the presence of distributed grey-matter abnormalities in schizophrenia, and their relation to focal structural abnormality of the hippocampus. The conjunction of these features has potential as a neuroimaging endophenotype of schizophrenia

    ENIGMA and global neuroscience: A decade of large-scale studies of the brain in health and disease across more than 40 countries

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    This review summarizes the last decade of work by the ENIGMA (Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta Analysis) Consortium, a global alliance of over 1400 scientists across 43 countries, studying the human brain in health and disease. Building on large-scale genetic studies that discovered the first robustly replicated genetic loci associated with brain metrics, ENIGMA has diversified into over 50 working groups (WGs), pooling worldwide data and expertise to answer fundamental questions in neuroscience, psychiatry, neurology, and genetics. Most ENIGMA WGs focus on specific psychiatric and neurological conditions, other WGs study normal variation due to sex and gender differences, or development and aging; still other WGs develop methodological pipelines and tools to facilitate harmonized analyses of "big data" (i.e., genetic and epigenetic data, multimodal MRI, and electroencephalography data). These international efforts have yielded the largest neuroimaging studies to date in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance use disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorders, epilepsy, and 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. More recent ENIGMA WGs have formed to study anxiety disorders, suicidal thoughts and behavior, sleep and insomnia, eating disorders, irritability, brain injury, antisocial personality and conduct disorder, and dissociative identity disorder. Here, we summarize the first decade of ENIGMA's activities and ongoing projects, and describe the successes and challenges encountered along the way. We highlight the advantages of collaborative large-scale coordinated data analyses for testing reproducibility and robustness of findings, offering the opportunity to identify brain systems involved in clinical syndromes across diverse samples and associated genetic, environmental, demographic, cognitive, and psychosocial factors

    Electroconvulsive therapy mediates neuroplasticity of white matter microstructure in major depression.

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    Whether plasticity of white matter (WM) microstructure relates to therapeutic response in major depressive disorder (MDD) remains uncertain. We examined diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) correlates of WM structural connectivity in patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), a rapidly acting treatment for severe MDD. Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) applied to DTI data (61 directions, 2.5 mm(3) voxel size) targeted voxel-level changes in fractional anisotropy (FA), and radial (RD), axial (AD) and mean diffusivity (MD) in major WM pathways in MDD patients (n=20, mean age: 41.15 years, 10.32 s.d.) scanned before ECT, after their second ECT and at transition to maintenance therapy. Comparisons made at baseline with demographically similar controls (n=28, mean age: 39.42 years, 12.20 s.d.) established effects of diagnosis. Controls were imaged twice to estimate scanning-related variance. Patients showed significant increases of FA in dorsal fronto-limbic circuits encompassing the anterior cingulum, forceps minor and left superior longitudinal fasciculus between baseline and transition to maintenance therapy (P<0.05, corrected). Decreases in RD and MD were observed in overlapping regions and the anterior thalamic radiation (P<0.05, corrected). Changes in DTI metrics associated with therapeutic response in tracts showing significant ECT effects differed between patients and controls. All measures remained stable across time in controls. Altered WM microstructure in pathways connecting frontal and limbic areas occur in MDD, are modulated by ECT and relate to therapeutic response. Increased FA together with decreased MD and RD, which trend towards normative values with treatment, suggest increased fiber integrity in dorsal fronto-limbic pathways involved in mood regulation

    An overview of the first 5 years of the ENIGMA obsessive–compulsive disorder working group: The power of worldwide collaboration

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    Abstract Neuroimaging has played an important part in advancing our understanding of the neurobiology of obsessive?compulsive disorder (OCD). At the same time, neuroimaging studies of OCD have had notable limitations, including reliance on relatively small samples. International collaborative efforts to increase statistical power by combining samples from across sites have been bolstered by the ENIGMA consortium; this provides specific technical expertise for conducting multi-site analyses, as well as access to a collaborative community of neuroimaging scientists. In this article, we outline the background to, development of, and initial findings from ENIGMA's OCD working group, which currently consists of 47 samples from 34 institutes in 15 countries on 5 continents, with a total sample of 2,323 OCD patients and 2,325 healthy controls. Initial work has focused on studies of cortical thickness and subcortical volumes, structural connectivity, and brain lateralization in children, adolescents and adults with OCD, also including the study on the commonalities and distinctions across different neurodevelopment disorders. Additional work is ongoing, employing machine learning techniques. Findings to date have contributed to the development of neurobiological models of OCD, have provided an important model of global scientific collaboration, and have had a number of clinical implications. Importantly, our work has shed new light on questions about whether structural and functional alterations found in OCD reflect neurodevelopmental changes, effects of the disease process, or medication impacts. We conclude with a summary of ongoing work by ENIGMA-OCD, and a consideration of future directions for neuroimaging research on OCD within and beyond ENIGMA

    Multivariate characterization of white matter heterogeneity in autism spectrum disorder

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    The complexity and heterogeneity of neuroimaging findings in individuals with autism spectrum disorder has suggested that many of the underlying alterations are subtle and involve many brain regions and networks. The ability to account for multivariate brain features and identify neuroimaging measures that can be used to characterize individual variation have thus become increasingly important for interpreting and understanding the neurobiological mechanisms of autism. In the present study, we utilize the Mahalanobis distance, a multidimensional counterpart of the Euclidean distance, as an informative index to characterize individual brain variation and deviation in autism. Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging data from 149 participants (92 diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and 57 typically developing controls) between 3.1 and 36.83 years of age were acquired over a roughly 10-year period and used to construct the Mahalanobis distance from regional measures of white matter microstructure. Mahalanobis distances were significantly greater and more variable in the autistic individuals as compared to control participants, demonstrating increased atypicalities and variation in the group of individuals diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Distributions of multivariate measures were also found to provide greater discrimination and more sensitive delineation between autistic and typically developing individuals than conventional univariate measures, while also being significantly associated with observed traits of the autism group. These results help substantiate autism as a truly heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder, while also suggesting that collectively considering neuroimaging measures from multiple brain regions provides improved insight into the diversity of brain measures in autism that is not observed when considering the same regions separately. Distinguishing multidimensional brain relationships may thus be informative for identifying neuroimaging-based phenotypes, as well as help elucidate underlying neural mechanisms of brain variation in autism spectrum disorders

    White matter microstructure in early onset Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Tourette Syndrome. A diffusion tensor imaging study in a population of drug-naïve children and adolescents with long-term clinical follow-up

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    Background and Objective Early onset obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and Tourette syndrome (TS) are frequently associated conditions. Beside the evidence of their high epidemiological cross-prevalence supported by a common genetic liability (Huisman-van Dijk et al., 2016; Yu et al., 2015), little is known on the nature of their close relationship on a pathophysiological level. By analyzing white matter (WM) microstructure through diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), the present study aimed to characterize and compare primary pathophysiological changes in drug-naïve children and adolescents with OCD, TS, and TS+OCD. Methods Fifty-one participants (mean age 10.2 2.0 years), including N=10 with OCD, N=16 with pure TS, N=14 with TS+OCD, and 11 age-matched controls were studied cross-sectionally through 3T MRI. We performed tractography and extracted DTI metrics in five WM tracts of interest, i.e., the cortico-spinal tract (CST), the anterior thalamic radiations (ATR), the inferior longitudinal fasciculus (ILF), the corpus callosum (CC), and the cingulum. Relationship between DTI changes and clinical severity was examined through correlational analyses. A clinical follow-up at mean 7.6 years after MRI examination was performed to evaluate clinical outcomes and association to neuroimaging findings. Results Significant between-group differences emerged in DTI metrics, specifically in fractional anisotropy (FA), an index of myelination and organization of axon fibers (Johansen-Berg & Rushworth, 2009; Toga et al., 2006). All analyzed tracts of interest except for the cingulum revealed a differential microstructure at group comparisons. The OCD group showed decreased FA within CST, ATR, ILF, and CC in respect to controls. A negative correlation was found between obsessive-compulsive symptoms and FA values in OCD, indicating that more severe clinical phenotypes are likely underpinned by less organized WM. Compared to controls, TS and TS+OCD groups both displayed remarkably different correlates from OCD and opposite DTI changes, i.e., increased FA in CST, ATR, ILF, and CC. Moreover, TS and TS+OCD had comparable DTI changes within all the investigated WM tracts and FA showed negative correlation with tic severity, revealing a shared pattern of WM organization in TS/TS+OCD with inverse relationship to symptom expression. At follow-up, no significant associations were found between FA values at baseline and long-term outcomes. Substantial symptom remission was achieved in 58.3% of TS, 63.6% of TS+OCD, and 70% of OCD patients, although a significant proportion of patient developed additional psychiatric disorders such as anxiety or depression. Conclusion The study highlights differential white matter involvement in pediatric OCD as opposed to TS/TS+OCD. Compared to neurotypical population, children with TS/TS+OCD showed an early increase in axons, fiber density, and/or myelination in WM bundles linking the frontal, occipital, and temporal cortices with each other and with the thalamus. Conversely, children with OCD showed widespread reduced organization of callosal, temporo-occipital, and fronto-thalamic WM tracts. Correlational analysis suggests that DTI changes in TS may reflect a compensatory reorganization in response to the disease pathophysiology, while in OCD they may represent a marker of the overall disease severity deriving from delay or damage to white matter development. Confirmation of these possibilities awaits longitudinal studies. The observation of shared DTI correlates of TS and TS+OCD strengthens the concept that at least some forms of OCD are etiologically related to TS and might therefore be a variant expression of the same etiologic factors that are important for the expression of tics (i.e., TS+OCD as a peculiar subtype of TS). By characterizing and differentiating early-stage neural underpinnings of OCD and TS, future targeted and neuroimaging-informed interventions may be developed
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