Literature DB >> 30776161

Age-specific associations between oestradiol, cortico-amygdalar structural covariance, and verbal and spatial skills.

Tuong-Vi Nguyen1,2,3, Sherri Lee Jones4,5, Tricia Gower4, Jimin Lew4, Matthew D Albaugh6, Kelly N Botteron7,8, James J Hudziak6,8, Vladimir S Fonov9, D Louis Collins9, Benjamin C Campbell10, Linda Booij1,11,12, Catherine M Herba12,13, Patricia Monnier2,3, Simon Ducharme1,9,14, Deborah Waber15, James T McCracken8,16.   

Abstract

Oestradiol is known to play an important role in the developing human brain, although little is known about the entire network of potential regions that might be affected and how these effects may vary from childhood to early adulthood, which in turn can explain sexually differentiated behaviours. In the present study, we examined the relationships between oestradiol, cortico-amygdalar structural covariance, and cognitive or behavioural measures typically showing sex differences (verbal/spatial skills, anxious-depressed symptomatology) in 152 children and adolescents (aged 6-22 years). Cortico-amygdalar structural covariance shifted from positive to negative across the age range. Oestradiol was found to diminish the impact of age on cortico-amygdalar covariance for the pre-supplementary motor area/frontal eye field and retrosplenial cortex (across the age range), as well as for the posterior cingulate cortex (in older children). Moreover, the influence of oestradiol on age-related cortico-amygdalar networks was associated with higher word identification and spatial working memory (across the age range), as well as higher reading comprehension (in older children), although it did not impact anxious-depressed symptoms. There were no significant sex effects on any of the above relationships. These findings confirm the importance of developmental timing on oestradiol-related effects and hint at the non-sexually dimorphic role of oestradiol-related cortico-amygdalar structural networks in aspects of cognition distinct from emotional processes.
© 2019 British Society for Neuroendocrinology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adolescence; cognition; oestrogen; puberty; structural covariance

Year:  2019        PMID: 30776161      PMCID: PMC6482064          DOI: 10.1111/jne.12698

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neuroendocrinol        ISSN: 0953-8194            Impact factor:   3.627


  94 in total

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Authors:  N Kabani; G Le Goualher; D MacDonald; A C Evans
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  1 in total

1.  Amygdalar reactivity is associated with prefrontal cortical thickness in a large population-based sample of adolescents.

Authors:  Matthew D Albaugh; James J Hudziak; Catherine Orr; Philip A Spechler; Bader Chaarani; Scott Mackey; Claude Lepage; Vladimir Fonov; Pierre Rioux; Alan C Evans; Tobias Banaschewski; Arun L W Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Erin Burke Quinlan; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Antoine Grigis; Penny Gowland; Andreas Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Jean-Luc Martinot; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Frauke Nees; Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos; Tomáš Paus; Luise Poustka; Sabina Millenet; Juliane H Fröhner; Michael N Smolka; Henrik Walter; Robert Whelan; Gunter Schumann; Alexandra S Potter; Hugh Garavan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-05-02       Impact factor: 3.752

  1 in total

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