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Decreased cortical gyrification and surface area in the left medial parietal cortex in patients with treatment-resistant and ultratreatment-resistant schizophrenia

Authors :
Kazutoshi Kitajima
Shunsuke Tamura
Daiki Sasabayashi
Shinichiro Nakajima
Yusuke Iwata
Fumihiko Ueno
Yoshifumi Takai
Junichi Takahashi
Fernando Caravaggio
Wanna Mar
Edgardo Torres‐Carmona
Yoshihiro Noda
Philip Gerretsen
Vincenzo de Luca
Masaru Mimura
Shogo Hirano
Tomohiro Nakao
Toshiaki Onitsuka
Gary Remington
Ariel Graff‐Guerrero
Yoji Hirano
Source :
Psychiatry and clinical neurosciencesReferences.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Validating the vulnerabilities and pathologies underlying treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS) is an important challenge in optimizing treatment. Gyrification and surface area (SA), reflecting neurodevelopmental features, have been linked to genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia. The aim of this study was to identify gyrification and SA abnormalities specific to TRS.We analyzed 3T magnetic resonance imaging findings of 24 healthy controls (HCs), 20 responders to first-line antipsychotics (FL-Resp), and 41 patients with TRS, including 19 clozapine responders (CLZ-Resp) and 22 FL- and clozapine-resistant patients (patients with ultratreatment-resistant schizophrenia [URS]). The local gyrification index (LGI) and associated SA were analyzed across groups. Diagnostic accuracy was verified by receiver operating characteristic curve analysis.Both CLZ-Resp and URS had lower LGI values than HCs (P = 0.041, Hedges g [gLGI and SA in the Lt-MPC, a functional hub in the default-mode network, were abnormally reduced in TRS compared with non-TRS. Thus, altered LGI and SA in the Lt-MPC might be structural features associated with genetic vulnerability to TRS.

Details

ISSN :
14401819
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry and clinical neurosciencesReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....378bff86c3fd632603846238afe8ce7f