| Literature DB >> 33857750 |
Wei Qi1, Esther Blessing1, Chenxiang Li2, Babak A Ardekani3, Kamber L Hart1, Julia Marx1, Oliver Freudenreich4, Corinne Cather4, Daphne Holt4, Iruma Bello5, Erica D Diminich6, Yingying Tang7, Michelle Worthington1, Botao Zeng8, Renrong Wu9, Xiaoduo Fan10, Andrea Troxel2, Jingping Zhao9, Jijun Wang7, Donald C Goff11.
Abstract
Hippocampal volume loss is prominent in first episode schizophrenia (FES) and has been associated with poor clinical outcomes and with BDNF genotype; antidepressants are believed to reverse hippocampal volume loss via release of BDNF. In a 12-month, placebo-controlled add-on trial of the antidepressant, citalopram, during the maintenance phase of FES, negative symptoms were improved with citalopram. We now report results of structural brain imaging at baseline and 6 months in 63 FES patients (34 in citalopram group) from the trial to assess whether protection against hippocampal volume loss contributed to improved negative symptoms with citalopram. Hippocampal volumetric integrity (HVI) did not change significantly in the citalopram or placebo group and did not differ between treatment groups, whereas citalopram was associated with greater volume loss of the right CA1 subfield. Change in cortical thickness was associated with SANS change in 4 regions (left rostral anterior cingulate, right frontal pole, right cuneus, and right transverse temporal) but none differed between treatment groups. Our findings suggest that minimal hippocampal volume loss occurs after stabilization on antipsychotic treatment and that citalopram's potential benefit for negative symptoms is unlikely to result from protection against hippocampal volume loss or cortical thinning.Entities:
Keywords: Citalopram; First-episode schizophrenia; Hippocampus; Negative symptoms
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33857750 PMCID: PMC8231472 DOI: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2021.111286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging ISSN: 0925-4927 Impact factor: 2.493