| Literature DB >> 31495700 |
Niamh Dooley1, Erik O'Hanlon2, Colm Healy3, Amy Adair4, Conor McCandless5, David Coppinger6, Ian Kelleher7, Mary Clarke8, Alexander Leemans9, Thomas Frodl10, Mary Cannon11.
Abstract
Around 1 in 5 children under 13 years old experience sub-clinical psychotic experiences (PEs) like hallucinations and delusions. While PEs in childhood are a significant risk factor for adult psychotic disorders, the majority of those experiencing childhood PEs do not develop a psychotic disorder. Individual differences in regional brain maturation rates may be responsible for this age-related and often transient emergence of PEs. Fronto-temporal association tracts undergo extensive maturation and myelination throughout childhood and adolescence, thus we focus on individual differences in one such tract, the arcuate fasciculus. A normative population-based sample of children (aged 11-13) attended a clinical interview and MRI (n = 100), 25 of whom were identified as reporting strong PEs. This group had reduced mean and radial diffusivity in the arcuate fasciculus compared with a group of matched controls (n = 25) who reported no PEs. The group difference was greater in the left hemisphere than the right. Mediation analyses showed that this group difference was driven predominantly by perceptual disturbances and an along-tract analysis showed that the group difference was greatest approximately halfway between the frontal and temporal termination points of the tract (adjacent to the left lateral ventricle). This study is the first to investigate links between arcuate fasciculus diffusivity and psychotic experiences in a population sample of children.Entities:
Keywords: Arcuate fasciculus; DTI; Psychotic experiences; Psychotic-like experiences; Tractography
Year: 2019 PMID: 31495700 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2019.08.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.939