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Reduced anterior cingulate gray matter volume and thickness in subjects with deficit schizophrenia.


ABSTRACT: Patients with deficit schizophrenia (D-SZ) differ from patients with the non-deficit form of schizophrenia (ND-SZ) in several aspects such as risk factors, neurobiological correlates, treatment response and clinical outcome. It has been debated if brain morphology could differentiate D-SZ from ND-SZ. Anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG) region regulates cognitive and emotional processing and past studies reported structural changes in this region in patients with SZ.1.5-T 3D MRI scans were obtained from 18 D-SZ patients, 30 ND-SZ patients and 82 healthy controls (HCs). We used FreeSurfer-initalized labeled cortical distance mapping (FSLCDM) to measure ACG gray matter volume, cortical thickness, and area of the gray/white interface. Furthermore, cortical thickness was compared among the 3 groups using the pooled labeled cortical distance mapping (LCDM) method.The ACG cortex of the D-SZ group was thinner than the ND-SZ group. Pooled LCDM demonstrated that the ACG cortex was bilaterally thinner in both the ND-SZ group and the D-SZ group compared with the control group. The right ACG gray matter volume was significantly reduced in D-SZ patients as compared with healthy controls (p=0.005 CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that qualitative, categorical differences in neuroanatomy may distinguish between deficit and non-deficit subtypes of schizophrenia.

SUBMITTER: Takayanagi M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4076020 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Reduced anterior cingulate gray matter volume and thickness in subjects with deficit schizophrenia.

Takayanagi Mizuho M   Wentz Jacqueline J   Takayanagi Yoichiro Y   Schretlen David J DJ   Ceyhan Elvan E   Wang Lei L   Suzuki Michio M   Sawa Akira A   Barta Patrick E PE   Ratnanather J Tilak JT   Cascella Nicola G NG  

Schizophrenia research 20130912 2-3


<h4>Background</h4>Patients with deficit schizophrenia (D-SZ) differ from patients with the non-deficit form of schizophrenia (ND-SZ) in several aspects such as risk factors, neurobiological correlates, treatment response and clinical outcome. It has been debated if brain morphology could differentiate D-SZ from ND-SZ. Anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG) region regulates cognitive and emotional processing and past studies reported structural changes in this region in patients with SZ.<h4>Methods</h4>  ...[more]

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