| Literature DB >> 31511636 |
Suheyla Cetin-Karayumak1, Maria A Di Biase2, Natalia Chunga2,3, Benjamin Reid2, Nathaniel Somes2,4, Amanda E Lyall2,5, Sinead Kelly2,6, Bengisu Solgun7, Ofer Pasternak2,5,8, Mark Vangel9, Godfrey Pearlson10, Carol Tamminga11, John A Sweeney12, Brett Clementz13, David Schretlen14, Petra Verena Viher15, Katharina Stegmayer15, Sebastian Walther15, Jungsun Lee16, Tim Crow17, Anthony James17, Aristotle Voineskos18, Robert W Buchanan19, Philip R Szeszko20, Anil K Malhotra21, Rachal Hegde6, Robert McCarley, Matcheri Keshavan6, Martha Shenton2,5,8,22, Yogesh Rathi2,5,8, Marek Kubicki2,5,8.
Abstract
Several prominent theories of schizophrenia suggest that structural white matter pathologies may follow a developmental, maturational, and/or degenerative process. However, a lack of lifespan studies has precluded verification of these theories. Here, we analyze the largest sample of carefully harmonized diffusion MRI data to comprehensively characterize age-related white matter trajectories, as measured by fractional anisotropy (FA), across the course of schizophrenia. Our analysis comprises diffusion scans of 600 schizophrenia patients and 492 healthy controls at different illness stages and ages (14-65 years), which were gathered from 13 sites. We determined the pattern of age-related FA changes by cross-sectionally assessing the timing of the structural neuropathology associated with schizophrenia. Quadratic curves were used to model between-group FA differences across whole-brain white matter and fiber tracts at each age; fiber tracts were then clustered according to both the effect-sizes and pattern of lifespan white matter FA differences. In whole-brain white matter, FA was significantly lower across the lifespan (up to 7%; p < 0.0033) and reached peak maturation younger in patients (27 years) compared to controls (33 years). Additionally, three distinct patterns of neuropathology emerged when investigating white matter fiber tracts in patients: (1) developmental abnormalities in limbic fibers, (2) accelerated aging and abnormal maturation in long-range association fibers, (3) severe developmental abnormalities and accelerated aging in callosal fibers. Our findings strongly suggest that white matter in schizophrenia is affected across entire stages of the disease. Perhaps most strikingly, we show that white matter changes in schizophrenia involve dynamic interactions between neuropathological processes in a tract-specific manner.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31511636 PMCID: PMC7147982 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-019-0509-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 13.437