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A diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging study of frontal cortex connections in very-late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis.
Authors:Derek K Jones  Marco Catani  Carlo Pierpaoli  Suzanne J Reeves  Sukhwinder S Shergill  Michael O'Sullivan  Philip Maguire  Mark A Horsfield  Andrew Simmons  Steven C R Williams  Robert J Howard
Affiliation:Section on Tissue Biophysics and Biomimetics, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development/NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: Onset of psychosis after the age of 60 may be associated with structural abnormalities within cerebral white matter. The authors looked within white-matter tracts, which mediate connectivity of the frontal lobes, in psychotic patients for evidence of loss of fiber integrity consistent with degenerative damage. METHODS: Fourteen patients with very-late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis and an age-matched control group underwent diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging. Tract maps were constructed for each subject from the imaging data, and measurements of fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity were made within the uncinate, superior longitudinal, and inferior occipito-frontal fasciculi, and the cingulum. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in fractional anisotropy, a measure of the ordering of axons within fiber tracts, nor in mean diffusivity, an orientationally-averaged measure of the bulk diffusivity within each voxel, between patients and control subjects. CONCLUSION: The lack of difference in fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity measures between patients and controls argues against the presence of structural abnormalities within these tracts and the notion that a focal white-matter abnormality within the tracts investigated underpins the onset of psychosis.
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