Literature DB >> 15856726

Increased gray-matter volume in medication-naive high-functioning children with autism spectrum disorder.

Saskia J M C Palmen1, Hilleke E Hulshoff Pol, Chantal Kemner, Hugo G Schnack, Sarah Durston, Bertine E Lahuis, René S Kahn, Herman Van Engeland.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To establish whether high-functioning children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have enlarged brains in later childhood, and if so, whether this enlargement is confined to the gray and/or to the white matter and whether it is global or more prominent in specific brain regions.
METHOD: Brain MRI scans were acquired from 21 medication-naive, high-functioning children with ASD between 7 and 15 years of age and 21 comparison subjects matched for gender, age, IQ, height, weight, handedness, and parental education, but not pubertal status.
RESULTS: Patients showed a significant increase of 6% in intracranium, total brain, cerebral gray matter, cerebellum, and of more than 40% in lateral and third ventricles compared to controls. The cortical gray-matter volume was evenly affected in all lobes. After correction for brain volume, ventricular volumes remained significantly larger in patients.
CONCLUSIONS: High-functioning children with ASD showed a global increase in gray-matter, but not white-matter and cerebellar volume, proportional to the increase in brain volume, and a disproportional increase in ventricular volumes, still present after correction for brain volume. Advanced pubertal development in the patients compared to the age-matched controls may have contributed to the findings reported in the present study.

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Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15856726     DOI: 10.1017/s0033291704003496

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  55 in total

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7.  The Impact of Inhaled Ambient Ultrafine Particulate Matter on Developing Brain: Potential Importance of Elemental Contaminants.

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Review 9.  Regulation of cerebral cortical size and neuron number by fibroblast growth factors: implications for autism.

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10.  Myeloid dendritic cells frequencies are increased in children with autism spectrum disorder and associated with amygdala volume and repetitive behaviors.

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