Title of article
Distinct structural alterations independently contributing to working memory deficits and symptomatology in paranoid schizophrenia
Author/Authors
Zierhut، نويسنده , , Kathrin C. and Schulte-Kemna، نويسنده , , Anna Bartra-Kaufmann، نويسنده , , Jِrn and Steiner، نويسنده , , Johann and Bogerts، نويسنده , , Bernhard and Schiltz، نويسنده , , Kolja، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
1063
To page
1072
Abstract
Schizophrenia is considered a brain disease with a quite heterogeneous clinical presentation. Studies in schizophrenia have yielded a wide array of correlations between structural and functional brain changes and clinical and cognitive symptoms. Reductions of grey matter volume (GMV) in the prefrontal and temporal cortex have been described which are crucial for the development of positive and negative symptoms and impaired working memory (WM).
ations between GMV reduction and positive and negative symptoms as well as WM impairment were assessed in schizophrenia patients (symptomatology in 34, WM in 26) and compared to healthy controls (36 total, WM in 26). GMV was determined by voxel-based morphometry and its relation to positive and negative symptoms as well as WM performance was assessed.
izophrenia patients, reductions of GMV were evident in anterior cingulate cortex, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC), superior temporal cortex, and insula. GMV reductions in the superior temporal gyrus (STG) were associated with positive symptom severity as well as WM impairment. Furthermore, the absolute GMV of VLPFC was strongly related to negative symptoms. These predicted WM performance as well as processing speed.
esent results support the assumption of two distinct pathomechanisms responsible for impaired WM in schizophrenia: (1) GMV reductions in the VLPFC predict the severity of negative symptoms. Increased negative symptoms in turn are associated with a slowing down of processing speed and predict an impaired WM. (2) GMV reductions in the temporal and mediofrontal cortex are involved in the development of positive symptoms and impair WM performance, too.
Keywords
2-Back working memory task , Absolute grey matter volume , Positive and negative symptoms , Paranoid-hallucinatory schizophrenia , voxel-based morphometry
Journal title
Cortex
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Cortex
Record number
2301262
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