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Association of hospitalization with structural brain alterations in patients with affective disorders over nine years

Authors :
Katharina Förster
Dominik Grotegerd
Katharina Dohm
Hannah Lemke
Verena Enneking
Susanne Meinert
Ronny Redlich
Walter Heindel
Jochen Bauer
Harald Kugel
Thomas Suslow
Patricia Ohrmann
Angela Carballedo
Veronica O’Keane
Andrew Fagan
Kelly Doolin
Hazel McCarthy
Philipp Kanske
Thomas Frodl
Udo Dannlowski
Source :
Translational Psychiatry, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Repeated hospitalizations are a characteristic of severe disease courses in patients with affective disorders (PAD). To elucidate how a hospitalization during a nine-year follow-up in PAD affects brain structure, a longitudinal case-control study (mean [SD] follow-up period 8.98 [2.20] years) was conducted using structural neuroimaging. We investigated PAD (N = 38) and healthy controls (N = 37) at two sites (University of Münster, Germany, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland). PAD were divided into two groups based on the experience of in-patient psychiatric treatment during follow-up. Since the Dublin-patients were outpatients at baseline, the re-hospitalization analysis was limited to the Münster site (N = 52). Voxel-based morphometry was employed to examine hippocampus, insula, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and whole-brain gray matter in two models: (1) group (patients/controls)×time (baseline/follow-up) interaction; (2) group (hospitalized patients/not-hospitalized patients/controls)×time interaction. Patients lost significantly more whole-brain gray matter volume of superior temporal gyrus and temporal pole compared to HC (p FWE = 0.008). Patients hospitalized during follow-up lost significantly more insular volume than healthy controls (p FWE = 0.025) and more volume in their hippocampus compared to not-hospitalized patients (p FWE = 0.023), while patients without re-hospitalization did not differ from controls. These effects of hospitalization remained stable in a smaller sample excluding patients with bipolar disorder. PAD show gray matter volume decline in temporo-limbic regions over nine years. A hospitalization during follow-up comes with intensified gray matter volume decline in the insula and hippocampus. Since hospitalizations are a correlate of severity, this finding corroborates and extends the hypothesis that a severe course of disease has detrimental long-term effects on temporo-limbic brain structure in PAD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21583188
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Translational Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.266fca6d98e64099b0c783a8455b3b5f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-023-02452-z