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A critical re-examination of sexual dimorphism in the corpus callosum microstructure
Authors:Westerhausen René  Kompus Kristiina  Dramsdahl Margaretha  Falkenberg Liv E  Grüner Renate  Hjelmervik Helene  Specht Karsten  Plessen Kerstin  Hugdahl Kenneth
Affiliation:a Department of Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway;b Division of Psychiatry, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway;c Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Bergen, Norway;d Department of Radiology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway;e Department of Physics and Technology, University of Bergen, Norway;f Center for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Bispebjerg Hospital, Denmark;g Institute for Neurology, Psychiatry, and Sensory Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:Recent diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI) studies suggest sexual dimorphism in the micro-structural architecture of the corpus callosum. However, the corpus callosum is also found to be larger in males than in females, a fact that might introduce a systematic bias to the analysis of DTI parameters. Diffusion parameters obtained in the larger male corpus callosum could be less affected by partial-volume averaging with surrounding non-callosal tissue than respective parameters obtained in the smaller female corpus callosum, i.e. the sex of the subject and partial-volume effects would be confounded. The objective of the present DTI study was to re-examine microstructural sex differences in the corpus callosum, while controlling for corpus callosum size differences between sexes. We compared 41 female and 34 male participants using regional tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) analysis. Clusters of significantly higher fractional anisotropy (FA) and lower diffusion strength in males compared to females were detected in the genu and truncus of the corpus callosum. However, only the sex difference located in the anterior genu subregions could be unequivocally interpreted. This was the only cluster where the diffusion parameters did not correlate with regional callosal size. The present results indicate a stronger inter-hemispheric connectivity between the frontal lobes in males than females, which might be related to sex differences in hemispheric asymmetry and brain size.
Keywords:Corpus callosum   Sex   Diffusion-tensor imaging   Asymmetry   DTI   TBSS
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