| Literature DB >> 29179814 |
Sean Froudist-Walsh1,2,3,4, Michael Ap Bloomfield1,2,3,5,6, Mattia Veronese7, Jasmin Kroll1, Vyacheslav R Karolis1, Sameer Jauhar1,2,3, Ilaria Bonoldi1,2,3, Philip K McGuire1, Shitij Kapur1, Robin M Murray1, Chiara Nosarti1,8, Oliver Howes1,2,3.
Abstract
Perinatal brain injuries, including hippocampal lesions, cause lasting changes in dopamine function in rodents, but it is not known if this occurs in humans. We compared adults who were born very preterm with perinatal brain injury to those born very preterm without perinatal brain injury, and age-matched controls born at full term using [18F]-DOPA PET and structural MRI. Dopamine synthesis capacity was reduced in the perinatal brain injury group relative to those without brain injury (Cohen's d = 1.36, p=0.02) and the control group (Cohen's d = 1.07, p=0.01). Hippocampal volume was reduced in the perinatal brain injury group relative to controls (Cohen's d = 1.17, p=0.01) and was positively correlated with striatal dopamine synthesis capacity (r = 0.344, p=0.03). This is the first evidence in humans linking neonatal hippocampal injury to adult dopamine dysfunction, and provides a potential mechanism linking early life risk factors to adult mental illness.Entities:
Keywords: brain injury; brain volume; dopamine; human; imaging; neuroscience; preterm
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29179814 PMCID: PMC5705207 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.29088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Neonatal, socio-demographic, cognitive and scanning measures.
| Very preterm-perinatal | Very preterm-no | Controls | Test statistic | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 16) | (n = 13) | (n = 14) | |||
| Gestational age in weeks Mean (SD) | 28.44 (2.28) | 30.46 (1.76) | U27 = 47.00 | p=0.011 | |
| Birth weight in grams Mean (SD) | 1203.19 (304.95) | 1557.15 (364.98) | U27 = 46.50 | p=0.012 | |
| Age in years Mean (SD) | 30.21 (1.78) | 30.85 (2.09) | 29.81 (3.24) | F2,40 = 1.50 | p=0.236 |
| Sex (female:male) | 03:13 | 04:09 | 05:09 | p=0.564 | |
| High SES (%)* | 68.75 | 69.23 | 61.53 | p=0.894 | |
| IQ Mean (SD) | 106.67 (14.52) | 107.73 (10.07) | 110.40 (10.52) | F2,33 = 0.28 | p=0.755 |
| Alcohol consumption (Units/week) | 7.40 (11.30) | 12.50 (11.99) | 5.50 (4.72) | p=0.205 | |
| Injected dose (MBq) | 146.44 (2.15) | 146.25 (2.52) | 145.73 (2.38) | F2,40 = 0.23 | p=0.793 |
*SES was collapsed into two groups; the percent of participants belonging to the high SES (level 1–2) category is presented in the table.
Striatal subregion dopamine synthesis capacity†.
| Striatal subregion | Anova, group differences | Very preterm-perinatal brain injury vs controls | Very preterm-perinatal brain injury vs Very preterm-no diagnosed injury | Very preterm-no diagnosed injury vs controls |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| t = −0.24 | ||||
| t = −1.20 | ||||
| Putamen | F = 2.98 | |||
| t = 0.45 |
†Statistically significant group differences are shown in bold. Displayed p-values are corrected for multiple comparisons (see methods).
Figure 1.Whole striatal dopamine synthesis capacity by group.
Individuals who suffered macroscopic perinatal brain injury related to VPT birth had significantly lower dopamine synthesis capacity in the whole striatum compared to other adults born VPT with no macroscopic perinatal brain injury (corrected p=0.023, Cohen’s d = 1.36) and full term-born controls (corrected p=0.01, Cohen’s d = 1.07).
Subcortical volumes (mm3) *.
| Very preterm-perinatal brain injury | Very preterm-no diagnosed injury | Control | Anova | Very preterm-perinatal brain injury vs Control | Very preterm-perinatal brain injury vs very preterm-no diagnosed injury | Very preterm-no diagnosed injury vs Control | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8624 (1329) | 9557 (1113) | 10090 | t = -1.97 p = 0.168 | t = -1.13 p = 0.802 | |||
| Striatum (whole) | 19098 (3217) | 19767 (2495) | 21487 | F = 2.70 | t = -2.17 p = 0.092 | t = -0.59 p = 1 | t = -1.82 p = 0.341 |
| Caudate | 7491 (1516) | 7609 (998) | 8250 | F =1.581 | t = -1.55 p = 0.322 | t = -0.23 p = 1 | t = -1.71 p = 0.514 |
| Putamen | 10541 (1682) | 10973 (1480) | 11977 | F =2.824 | t = -2.25 p = 0.079 | t = -0.70 p = 1 | t = -1.68 p = 0.343 |
| Nucleus Accumbens | 1066 (210) | 1185 (167) | 1260 (227) | F =3.023 | t = -2.26 p = 0.06 | t = -1.60 p = 0.43 | t = -0.96 p = 1 |
*Statistically significant group differences are shown in bold. p-values for ANOVA tests of the striatal subregions adjusted using FDR method for positively correlated samples. p-values for the post-hoc t-tests are corrected for multiple comparisons using the Bonferroni method.
Figure 2.Relationship between hippocampal volume and dopamine synthesis capacity in the (A) caudate and (B) nucleus accumbens.