Publications (2)12.51 Total impact
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Article: Neuroanatomical correlates of different vulnerability states for psychosis and their clinical outcomes.
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ABSTRACT: Structural brain abnormalities have been described in individuals with an at-risk mental state for psychosis. However, the neuroanatomical underpinnings of the early and late at-risk mental state relative to clinical outcome remain unclear. To investigate grey matter volume abnormalities in participants in a putatively early or late at-risk mental state relative to their prospective clinical outcome. Voxel-based morphometry of magnetic resonance imaging data from 20 people with a putatively early at-risk mental state (ARMS-E group) and 26 people with a late at-risk mental state (ARMS-L group) as well as from 15 participants with at-risk mental states with subsequent disease transition (ARMS-T group) and 18 participants without subsequent disease transition (ARMS-NT group) were compared with 75 healthy volunteers. Compared with healthy controls, ARMS-L participants had grey matter volume losses in frontotemporolimbic structures. Participants in the ARMS-E group showed bilateral temporolimbic alterations and subtle prefrontal abnormalities. Participants in the ARMS-T group had prefrontal alterations relative to those in the ARMS-NT group and in the healthy controls that overlapped with the findings in the ARMS-L group. Brain alterations associated with the early at-risk mental state may relate to an elevated susceptibility to psychosis, whereas alterations underlying the late at-risk mental state may indicate a subsequent transition to psychosis.The British journal of psychiatry: the journal of mental science 10/2009; 195(3):218-26. · 6.62 Impact Factor -
Article: Structural correlates of psychopathological symptom dimensions in schizophrenia: a voxel-based morphometric study.
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ABSTRACT: Structural neuroimaging has substantially advanced the neurobiological research of schizophrenia by describing a range of focal brain alterations as possible neuroanatomical underpinnings of the disease. Despite this progress, a considerable heterogeneity of structural findings persists that may reflect the phenomenological diversity of schizophrenia. It is unclear whether the range of possible clinical disease manifestations relates to a core structural brain deficit or to distinct structural correlates. Therefore, gray matter density (GMD) differences between 175 schizophrenic patients (SZ) and 177 matched healthy control subjects (HC) were examined in a three-step approach using cross-sectional and conjunctional voxel-based morphometry (VBM): (1) analysis of structural alterations irrespective of symptomatology; (2) subdivision of the patient sample according to a three-dimensional factor model of the PANSS and investigation of structural differences between these subsamples and healthy controls; (3) analysis of a common pattern of structural alterations present in all patient subsamples compared to healthy controls. Significant GMD reductions in patients compared to controls were identified within the prefrontal, limbic, paralimbic, temporal and thalamic regions. The disorganized symptom dimension was associated with bilateral alterations in temporal, insular and medial prefrontal cortices. Positive symptoms were associated with left-pronounced alterations in perisylvian regions and extended thalamic GMD losses. Negative symptoms were linked to the most extended alterations within orbitofrontal, medial prefrontal, lateral prefrontal and temporal cortices as well as limbic and subcortical structures. Thus, structural heterogeneity in schizophrenia may relate to specific patterns of GMD reductions that possibly share a common prefrontal-perisylvian pattern of structural brain alterations.NeuroImage 03/2008; 39(4):1600-12. · 5.89 Impact Factor