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Age-dependent alterations in the coordinated development of subcortical regions in adolescents with social anxiety disorder

Authors :
Jingjing Liu
Shuqi Xie
Yang Hu
Yue Ding
Xiaochen Zhang
Wenjing Liu
Lei Zhang
Changminghao Ma
Yinzhi Kang
Shuyu Jin
Yufeng Xia
Zhishan Hu
Zhen Liu
Wenhong Cheng
Zhi Yang
Source :
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Subcortical brain regions play essential roles in the pathology of social anxiety disorder (SAD). While adolescence is the peak period of SAD, the relationships between altered development of the subcortical regions during this period and SAD are still unclear. This study investigated the age-dependent alterations in structural co-variance among subcortical regions and between subcortical and cortical regions, aiming to reflect aberrant coordination during development in the adolescent with SAD. High-resolution T1-weighted images were obtained from 76 adolescents with SAD and 67 healthy controls (HC), ranging from 11 to 17.9 years. Symptom severity was evaluated with the Social Anxiety Scale for Children (SASC) and the Depression Self Rating Scale for Children (DSRS-C). Structural co-variance and sliding age-window analyses were used to detect age-dependent group differences in inter-regional coordination patterns among subcortical regions and between subcortical and cortical regions. The volume of the striatum significantly correlated with SAD symptom severity. The SAD group exhibited significantly enhanced structural co-variance among key regions of the striatum (putamen and caudate). While the co-variance decreased with age in healthy adolescents, the co-variance in SAD adolescents stayed high, leading to more apparent group differences in middle adolescence. Moreover, the striatum's mean structural co-variance with cortical regions decreased with age in HC but increased with age in SAD. Adolescents with SAD suffer aberrant developmental coordination among the key regions of the striatum and between the striatum and cortical regions. The degree of incoordination is age-dependent, which may represent a neurodevelopmental trait of SAD.

Details

ISSN :
1435165X and 10188827
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ccb5ac9df762dff4277eff629d6911d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-022-02118-z