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Increased white matter metabolic rates in autism spectrum disorder and schizophrenia
Authors:Serge A. Mitelman  Monte S. Buchsbaum  Derek S. Young  M. Mehmet Haznedar  Eric Hollander  Lina Shihabuddin  Erin A. Hazlett  Marie-Cecile Bralet
Affiliation:1.Departments of Psychiatry and Neuroscience,Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,New York,USA;2.Department of Psychiatry, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,Elmhurst Hospital Center,Elmhurst,USA;3.Departments of Psychiatry and Radiology, San Diego School of Medicine, NeuroPET Center,University of California,San Diego,USA;4.Department of Statistics,University of Kentucky,Lexington,USA;5.Outpatient Psychiatry Care Center,James J. Peters VA Medical Center,Bronx,USA;6.Autism and Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Program, Anxiety and Depression Program, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science,Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center,Bronx,USA;7.Research and Development and VISN 2 Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center,James J. Peters VA Medical Center,Bronx,USA;8.Crisalid Unit (FJ5),CHI Clermont de l’Oise,Clermont,France;9.Inserm Unit U669, Maison de Solenn,Paris,France;10.GDR 3557 Recherche Psychiatrie,Paris,France
Abstract:Both autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizophrenia are often characterized as disorders of white matter integrity. Multimodal investigations have reported elevated metabolic rates, cerebral perfusion and basal activity in various white matter regions in schizophrenia, but none of these functions has previously been studied in ASD. We used 18fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography to compare white matter metabolic rates in subjects with ASD (n?=?25) to those with schizophrenia (n?=?41) and healthy controls (n?=?55) across a wide range of stereotaxically placed regions-of-interest. Both subjects with ASD and schizophrenia showed increased metabolic rates across the white matter regions assessed, including internal capsule, corpus callosum, and white matter in the frontal and temporal lobes. These increases were more pronounced, more widespread and more asymmetrical in subjects with ASD than in those with schizophrenia. The highest metabolic increases in both disorders were seen in the prefrontal white matter and anterior limb of the internal capsule. Compared to normal controls, differences in gray matter metabolism were less prominent and differences in adjacent white matter metabolism were more prominent in subjects with ASD than in those with schizophrenia. Autism spectrum disorder and schizophrenia are associated with heightened metabolic activity throughout the white matter. Unlike in the gray matter, the vector of white matter metabolic abnormalities appears to be similar in ASD and schizophrenia, may reflect inefficient functional connectivity with compensatory hypermetabolism, and may be a common feature of neurodevelopmental disorders.
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