Literature DB >> 26184828

Increased Surface Area, but not Cortical Thickness, in a Subset of Young Boys With Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Haruhisa Ohta1,2, Christine Wu Nordahl1, Ana-Maria Iosif3, Aaron Lee1, Sally Rogers1, David G Amaral1.   

Abstract

The Autism Phenome Project is the largest, single site, longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study of young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Previous analyses from this cohort have shown that the children with autism have a total brain volume at time 1 (∼3 years of age) that is 6% larger than typically developing (TD) children. This finding is driven primarily by 15% of the boys with ASD that have disproportionate megalencephaly (ASD-DM) or brain size that is 1.5 standard deviations above what would be expected for the child's height. In the current study, cerebral cortical grey matter volume, thickness, and surface area were assayed from MRI scans of 112, 3-year-old boys with ASD and 50 age-matched TD boys. The boys with ASD-DM (n = 17) were analyzed separately from the boys with normal brain size (ASD-N, n = 95). Previous studies of cortical thickness and surface area for ASD children in this age range have come to diametrically different conclusions concerning the significance of cortical thickness vs. surface area. Current analyses indicate that cortical thickness was comparable across the ASD and TD groups. However, surface area was significantly greater in the ASD group compared to the TD group. This result was driven largely by the children with ASD-DM. Even in the ASD-DM group, not all cortical regions demonstrated increased surface area. These results provide strong evidence that the early cortical overgrowth associated with ASD is due primarily to increased surface area and not to increased cortical thickness.
© 2015 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  FreeSurfer; autism spectrum disorder; cortical thickness; gray matter volume; megalencephaly; surface area

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26184828      PMCID: PMC4886547          DOI: 10.1002/aur.1520

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Autism Res        ISSN: 1939-3806            Impact factor:   5.216


  65 in total

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7.  Brief report: methods for acquiring structural MRI data in very young children with autism without the use of sedation.

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10.  Mapping cortical anatomy in preschool aged children with autism using surface-based morphometry.

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  35 in total

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2.  Large-scale analyses of the relationship between sex, age and intelligence quotient heterogeneity and cortical morphometry in autism spectrum disorder.

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3.  Differential Altered Auditory Event-Related Potential Responses in Young Boys on the Autism Spectrum With and Without Disproportionate Megalencephaly.

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4.  Environmental Influences on Infant Cortical Thickness and Surface Area.

Authors:  Shaili C Jha; Kai Xia; Mihye Ahn; Jessica B Girault; Gang Li; Li Wang; Dinggang Shen; Fei Zou; Hongtu Zhu; Martin Styner; John H Gilmore; Rebecca C Knickmeyer
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Review 5.  Behavioral and neuroanatomical approaches in models of neurodevelopmental disorders: opportunities for translation.

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7.  The Neuroanatomy of Autism Spectrum Disorder Symptomatology in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.

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8.  Cortical thickness change in autism during early childhood.

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9.  Local Cortical Gyrification is Increased in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders, but Decreases Rapidly in Adolescents.

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Review 10.  The Neurodevelopment of Autism from Infancy Through Toddlerhood.

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