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Somatosensory–motor bodily representation cortical thinning in Tourette: Effects of tic severity, age and gender

Authors :
Samir Das
Alan C. Evans
John C. Chen
Cherine Fahim
Rozie Arnaoutelis
Uicheul Yoon
Guy A. Rouleau
Catherine Brandner
Kirk A. Frey
Paul Sandor
Oliver C. Lyttelton
Source :
Cortex. 46:750-760
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Tourette syndrome (TS) implicates the disinhibition of the cortico-striatal-thalamic-cortical circuitry (CSTC). Previous studies used a volumetric approach to investigate this circuitry with inconsistent findings. Cortical thickness may represent a more reliable measure than volume due to the low variability in the cytoarchitectural structure of the grey matter.66 magnetic resonance imaging scans were acquired from 34 TS subjects (age range 10-25, mean 17.19+/-4.1) and 32 normal controls (NC) (age range 10-20, mean 16.33+/-3.56). Brain morphology was assessed using the fully automated CIVET pipeline at the Montreal Neurological Institute.We report (1) significant cortical thinning in the fronto-parietal and somatosensory-motor cortices in TS relative to NC (p.05); (2) TS boys showed thinner cortex relative to TS girls in the fronto-parietal cortical regions (p.05); (3) significant decrease in the fronto-parietal mean cortical thickness in TS subjects with age relative to NC and in the pre-central cortex in TS boys relative to TS girls; (4) significant negative correlations between tic severity and the somatosensory-motor cortical thickness.TS revealed important thinning in brain regions particularly involved in the somatosensory/motor bodily representations which may play an important role in tics. Our findings are in agreement with Leckman et al. (1991) hypothesis stating that facial tics would be associated with dysfunction in an orofacial subset of the motor circuit, eye blinking with the occulo-motor circuit, whereas lack of inhibition to a dysfunction in the prefrontal cortex. Gender and age differences may reflect differential etiological factors, which have significant clinical relevance in TS and should be considered in developing and using diagnostic and therapeutic interventions.

Details

ISSN :
00109452
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cortex
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....83eb104176585b800e4f5a35e8556a49