Literature DB >> 29206399

Association between structural and functional brain alterations in drug-free patients with schizophrenia: zzm321990a multimodal meta-analysis

Xin Gao1, Wenjing Zhang1, Li Yao1, Yuan Xiao1, Lu Liu1, Jieke Liu1, Siyi Li1, Bo Tao1, Chandan Shah1, Qiyong Gong1, John Sweeney1, Su Lui1.   

Abstract

Background: Neuroimaging studies have shown both structural and functional abnormalities in patients with schizophrenia. Recently, studies have begun to explore the association between structural and functional grey matter abnormalities. By conducting a meta­-analysis on morphometric and functional imaging studies of grey matter alterations in drug-free patients, the present study aims to examine the degree of overlap between brain regions with anatomic and functional changes in patients with schizophrenia.
Methods: We performed a systematic search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science and the Cochrane Library to identify relevant publications. A multimodal analysis was then conducted using Seed-based d Mapping software. Exploratory analyses included jackknife, subgroup and meta-regression analyses.
Results: We included 15 structural MRI studies comprising 486 drug-free patients and 485 healthy controls, and 16 functional MRI studies comprising 403 drug-free patients and 428 controls in our meta-analysis. Drug-free patients were examined to reduce pharmacological effects on the imaging data. Multimodal analysis showed considerable overlap between anatomic and functional changes, mainly in frontotemporal regions, bilateral medial posterior cingulate/paracingulate gyrus, bilateral insula, basal ganglia and left cerebellum. There were also brain regions showing only anatomic changes in the right superior frontal gyrus, left supramarginal gyrus, right lingual gyrus and functional alternations involving the right angular ­gyrus. Limitations: The methodological aspects, patient characteristics and clinical variables of the included studies were heterogeneous, and we cannot exclude medication effects.
Conclusion: The present study showed overlapping anatomic and functional brain abnormalities mainly in the default mode (DMN) and auditory networks (AN) in drug-free patients with schizophrenia. However, the pattern of changes differed in these networks. Decreased grey matter was associated with decreased activation within the DMN, whereas it was associated with increased activation within the AN. These discrete patterns suggest different pathophysiological changes impacting structural and functional associations within different neural networks in patients with schizophrenia. 2017 Joule Inc., or its licensors

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 29206399     DOI: 10.1503/jpn.160219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci        ISSN: 1180-4882            Impact factor:   6.186


  1 in total

Review 1.  Strategies to solve the reverse inference fallacy in future MRI studies of schizophrenia: a review.

Authors:  Chuanjun Zhuo; Gongying Li; Xiaodong Lin; Deguo Jiang; Yong Xu; Hongjun Tian; Wenqiang Wang; Xueqin Song
Journal:  Brain Imaging Behav       Date:  2021-04       Impact factor: 3.224

  1 in total

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