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Combined analysis of grey matter voxel-based morphometry and white matter tract-based spatial statistics in late-life bipolar disorder
Authors:Haller Sven  Xekardaki Aikaterini  Delaloye Christophe  Canuto Alessandra  Lövblad Karl Olof  Gold Gabriel  Giannakopoulos Panteleimon
Institution:Haller, Lövblad — Service neuro-diagnostique et neuro-interventionnel DISIM, University Hospitals of Geneva; Xekardaki, Delaloye, Canuto, Giannakopoulos — Division of General Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University Hospitals of Geneva; Gold — Department of Rehabilitation and Geriatrics, University Hospitals of Geneva; Giannakopoulos — Division of Old Age Psychiatry, University of Lausanne School of Medicine, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract:

Background

Previous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in young patients with bipolar disorder indicated the presence of grey matter concentration changes as well as microstructural alterations in white matter in various neocortical areas and the corpus callosum. Whether these structural changes are also present in elderly patients with bipolar disorder with long-lasting clinical evolution remains unclear.

Methods

We performed a prospective MRI study of consecutive elderly, euthymic patients with bipolar disorder and healthy, elderly controls. We conducted a voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analysis and a tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) analysis to assess fractional anisotropy and longitudinal, radial and mean diffusivity derived by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).

Results

We included 19 patients with bipolar disorder and 47 controls in our study. Fractional anisotropy was the most sensitive DTI marker and decreased significantly in the ventral part of the corpus callosum in patients with bipolar disorder. Longitudinal, radial and mean diffusivity showed no significant between-group differences. Grey matter concentration was reduced in patients with bipolar disorder in the right anterior insula, head of the caudate nucleus, nucleus accumbens, ventral putamen and frontal orbital cortex. Conversely, there was no grey matter concentration or fractional anisotropy increase in any brain region in patients with bipolar disorder compared with controls.

Limitations

The major limitation of our study is the small number of patients with bipolar disorder.

Conclusion

Our data document the concomitant presence of grey matter concentration decreases in the anterior limbic areas and the reduced fibre tract coherence in the corpus callosum of elderly patients with long-lasting bipolar disorder.
Keywords:
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