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research article
Preservation and compensation: The functional neuroanatomy of insight and working memory in schizophrenia
Authors
M Birchwood
MA Cooke
+6 more
D Fannon
DH ffytche
E Kuipers
V Kumari
A Sapara
SCR Williams
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
Elsevier
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: Poor insight in schizophrenia has been theorised to reflect a cognitive deficit that is secondary to brain abnormalities, localized in the brain regions that are implicated in higher order cognitive functions, including working memory (WM). This study investigated WM-related neural substrates of preserved and poor insight in schizophrenia. Method: Forty stable schizophrenia outpatients, 20 with preserved and 20 with poor insight (usable data obtained from 18 preserved and 14 poor insight patients), and 20 healthy participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a parametric 'n-back' task. The three groups were preselected to match on age, education and predicted IQ, and the two patient groups to have distinct insight levels. Performance and fMRI data were analysed to determine how groups of patients with preserved and poor insight differed from each other, and from healthy participants. Results: Poor insight patients showed lower performance accuracy, relative to healthy participants (p. = 0.01) and preserved insight patients (p. = 0.08); the two patient groups were comparable on symptoms and medication. Preserved insight patients, relative to poor insight patients, showed greater activity most consistently in the precuneus and cerebellum (both bilateral) during WM; they also showed greater activity than healthy participants in the inferior-superior frontal gyrus and cerebellum (bilateral). Group differences in brain activity did not co-vary significantly with performance accuracy. Conclusions: The precuneus and cerebellum function contribute to preserved insight in schizophrenia. Preserved insight as well as normal-range WM capacity in schizophrenia sub-groups may be achieved via compensatory neural activity in the frontal cortex and cerebellum. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.Wellcome Trust, UK; NIHR Birmingham and Black Country CLAHRC, UK; Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health at the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London; South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, UK
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