17 research outputs found
Lower plasma total tau in adolescent psychosis: Involvement of the orbitofrontal cortex
Schizophrenia is thought to be a neurodevelopmental disorder with neuronal migration, differentiation and maturation disturbances. Tau is a microtubule-associated protein with a crucial role in these processes. Lower circulating tau levels have been reported in adults with schizophrenia, but this association has not been investigated in adolescent psychosis. We aimed to test the hypotheses that a) adolescents with early-onset psychosis (EOP; age of onset <18 years) display lower plasma tau concentrations compared to healthy controls, and b) among patients with psychosis, tau levels are linked to structural brain measures associated with the microtubule-associated tau (MAPT) gene and psychosis. We included 37 adolescent patients with EOP (mean age 16.4 years) and 59 adolescent healthy controls (mean age 16.2 years). We investigated putative patient-control differences in plasma total tau concentrations measured by a Single molecule array (Simoa) immunoassay. We explored the correlations between tau and selected structural brain measures based on T1-weighted MRI scans processed in FreeSurfer v6.0. We found significantly lower plasma tau concentrations in patients compared to healthy controls (p = 0.017, partial eta-squared = 0.061). Tau was not associated with antipsychotic use or the antipsychotic dosage. Among patients but not healthy controls, tau levels were positively correlated with the cortical orbitofrontal surface area (p = 0.013, R-squared = 0.24). The results are suggestive of a tau-related neurodevelopmental disturbance in adolescent psychosis
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Intracranial and subcortical volumes in adolescents with earlyâonset psychosis: A multisite megaâanalysis from the ENIGMA consortium
Earlyâonset psychosis disorders are serious mental disorders arising before the age of 18âyears. Here, we investigate the largest neuroimaging dataset, to date, of patients with earlyâonset psychosis and healthy controls for differences in intracranial and subcortical brain volumes. The sample included 263 patients with earlyâonset psychosis (mean age: 16.4âÂąâ1.4âyears, mean illness duration: 1.5âÂąâ1.4âyears, 39.2% female) and 359 healthy controls (mean age: 15.9âÂąâ1.7âyears, 45.4% female) with magnetic resonance imaging data, pooled from 11 clinical cohorts. Patients were diagnosed with earlyâonset schizophrenia (n = 183), affective psychosis (n = 39), or other psychotic disorders (n = 41). We used linear mixedâeffects models to investigate differences in intracranial and subcortical volumes across the patient sample, diagnostic subgroup and antipsychotic medication, relative to controls. We observed significantly lower intracranial (Cohen's d = â0.39) and hippocampal (d = â0.25) volumes, and higher caudate (d = 0.25) and pallidum (d = 0.24) volumes in patients relative to controls. Intracranial volume was lower in both earlyâonset schizophrenia (d = â0.34) and affective psychosis (d = â0.42), and earlyâonset schizophrenia showed lower hippocampal (d = â0.24) and higher pallidum (d = 0.29) volumes. Patients who were currently treated with antipsychotic medication (n = 193) had significantly lower intracranial volume (d = â0.42). The findings demonstrate a similar pattern of brain alterations in earlyâonset psychosis as previously reported in adult psychosis, but with notably low intracranial volume. The low intracranial volume suggests disrupted neurodevelopment in adolescent earlyâonset psychosis