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Structural brain and neuropsychometric changes associated with pediatric bipolar disorder with psychosis
Authors:James Anthony  Hough Morgan  James Susan  Burge Linda  Winmill Louise  Nijhawan Sunita  Matthews Paul M  Zarei Mojtaba
Affiliation:Highfield Family and Adolescent Unit, Warneford Hospital Oxford Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain (FMRIB), John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford GSK Clinical Imaging Centre, Imperial College London, London, UK. anthony.james@psych.ox.ac.uk
Abstract:James A, Hough M, James S, Burge L, Winmill L, Nijhawan S, Matthews PM, Zarei M. Structural brain and neuropsychometric changes associated with pediatric bipolar disorder with psychosis.
Bipolar Disord 2011: 13: 16–27. © 2011 The Authors.
Journal compilation © 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Objectives: To identify neuropsychological and structural brain changes using a combination of high‐resolution structural and diffusion tensor imaging in pediatric bipolar disorder (PBD) with psychosis (presence of delusions and or hallucinations). Methods: We recruited 15 patients and 20 euthymic age‐ and gender‐matched healthy controls. All subjects underwent high‐resolution structural and diffusion tensor imaging. Voxel‐based morphometry (VBM), tract‐based spatial statistics (TBSS), and probabilistic tractography were used to analyse magnetic resonance imaging data. Results: The PBD subjects had normal overall intelligence with specific impairments in working memory, executive function, language function, and verbal memory. Reduced gray matter (GM) density was found in the left orbitofrontal cortex, left pars triangularis, right premotor cortex, occipital cortex, right occipital fusiform gyrus, and right crus of the cerebellum. TBSS analysis showed reduced fractional anisotropy (FA) in the anterior corpus callosum. Probabilistic tractography from this cluster showed that this region of the corpus callosum is connected with the prefrontal cortices, including those regions whose density is decreased in PBD. In addition, FA change was correlated with verbal memory and working memory, while more widespread reductions in GM density correlated with working memory, executive function, language function, and verbal memory. Conclusions: The findings suggest widespread cortical changes as well as specific involvement of interhemispheric prefrontal tracts in PBD, which may reflect delayed myelination in these tracts.
Keywords:bipolar disorder  DTI  MRI  pediatric  VBM
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