| Literature DB >> 24252498 |
Manuel F Casanova1, Ayman S El-Baz, Shweta S Kamat, Brynn A Dombroski, Fahmi Khalifa, Ahmed Elnakib, Ahmed Soliman, Anita Allison-McNutt, Andrew E Switala.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous reports indicate the presence of histological abnormalities in the brains of individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) suggestive of a dysplastic process. In this study we identified areas of abnormal cortical thinning within the cerebral cortex of ASD individuals and examined the same for neuronal morphometric abnormalities by using computerized image analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24252498 PMCID: PMC3893372 DOI: 10.1186/2051-5960-1-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
ATP donors with autism spectrum disorder and age-matched controls used for this experiment
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| 1. | UMB-1627 | 5.0 | F | N | no medication | Multiple injuries/Motor vehicle accident |
| 2. | AN13961 | 7.5 | M | Y | Phenobarbital | Drowning |
| Tegretol | ||||||
| Albuterol | ||||||
| 3. | AN00754 | 13.– | M | Y | Trileptol | Epilepsy |
| Trazadone | ||||||
| 4. | IBR-425-02 | 4.2 | M | N | Asthma medication NOS | Drowning, Hypothermia |
| 5. | AN19511 | 8.– | M | N | Peridex | Rhabdomyosarcoma |
| Nystatin | ||||||
| G-CSF | ||||||
| Benadryl | ||||||
| Phenergan | ||||||
| Dexamethasone | ||||||
| Morphine | ||||||
| 6. | AN02338 | 17.2 | F | N | Paxil | Cardiac arrest/Dilated cardiomyopathy |
| 7. | AN09730 | 22.9 | M | Y | Neurontin | Choking/Epilepsy |
| Thioridazine | ||||||
| Zonegran | ||||||
| Fish oil | ||||||
| Flaxseed oil | ||||||
| CoEnzyme Q10 | ||||||
| | ||||||
| 1. | UMB-1499 | 4.5 | F | N | N/A | Myocarditis |
| 2. | UMB-4898 | 7.7 | M | N | N/A | Drowning |
| 3. | BTB-3638 | 14.3 | M | N | N/A | Electrocution |
| 4. | AN02456 | 4.– | F | N | N/A | Bronchopneumonia / Post-surgical procedure |
| 5. | UMB-1708 | 8.1 | F | N | N/A | Multiple injuries |
| 6. | UMB-1843 | 15.9 | F | N | N/A | Multiple injuries / Motor vehicle accident |
| 7. | UMB-1646 | 23.2 | M | N | N/A | Rupture of spleen |
Figure 1Solution of the Laplace equation inside the cortical ribbon. The outer contour is the lamina I/lamina II boundary φ = –1 ; the inner contour is the white matter boundary φ = +1; and the midline is the equipotential φ = 0. Field lines are displayed spaced at 1 mm intervals along the midline.
Figure 2Mean in each brain section. The seven pairs are plotted individually, with measurements from the ASD donor indicated by triangles, and circles for the matched neurotypical donor. Note that the horizontal axis scale is not uniform. Average thickness for each slide is plotted with respect to the slide’s corresponding position in stereotaxic space. Six out of seven ASD patients showed diminutions within prefrontal cortex as defined by the AC.
Figure 3Difference in between the cerebral cortices of ASD and neurotypical donors with respect to position and curvature. The horizontal axis is the same as in Figure 2 (73 mm = frontal pole; 0 = anterior commissure; -106 mm = occipital pole). Regions where the cortex is narrower in ASD are colored blue, while regions where the cortex is wider are colored orange. Data were averaged across all seven pairs.
Figure 4Box plots of estimated Boolean model parameters by lamina. The Boolean germ-grain model is completely characterized by three quantities: mean area and perimeter of the grain distribution, and intensity of the Poisson germ process.
Figure 5Pattern spectrum by lamina, obtained by granulometry on segmented (binary) images. Bar height (y axis) is proportional to the total area of stained objects with sizes falling within each bin. The spectra were averaged bin-wise over the twelve narrow cortical regions of interest from two ASD cases and the twelve corresponding regions from matched control cases.
Figure 6Coronal sections through the brain of an autistic patient. The overlay denotes those cortical areas showing abnormalities of cortical thickness. Towards both pole regions cortical thickness abnormalities preferentially affected the crest of gyri. Defects in cortical width tended to affect both crest and sulci of gyri in middle sections. Defects affecting crest of gyri were usually larger than those seen at the sulci of gyri. The y-coordinates are the normalized positions as in Figures 3 and 4.