articleArchives of General PsychiatrySep 1, 2003Closed access

Regionally Localized Thinning of the Cerebral Cortex in Schizophrenia

Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging · Cognitive Neuroimaging Lab

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Schizophrenia is characterized by small reductions in cortical gray matter volume, particularly in the temporal and prefrontal cortices. The question of whether cortical thickness is reduced in schizophrenia has not been addressed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques. Our objectives were to test the hypothesis that cortical thinning in patients with schizophrenia (relative to control subjects) is greater in temporal and prefrontal regions of interest (ROIs) than in control ROIs (superior parietal, calcarine, postcentral, central, and precentral cortices), and to obtain an unbiased estimate of the distribution of cortical thinning in patients (relative to controls) by constructing mean and statistical cortical thickness difference maps.

Methods

Participants included 33 right-handed outpatients receiving medication and meeting DSM-IV criteria for schizophrenia and 32 healthy volunteers, matched on age and parental socioeconomic status. After high-resolution MRI scans, models of the gray-white and pial surfaces were generated for each individual's cortex, and the distance between these 2 surfaces was used to compute cortical thickness. A surface-based averaging technique that aligned the main cortical folds across individuals allowed between-group comparisons of thickness within ROIs, and at multiple, uniformly sampled loci across the cortical ribbon.

Citation impact

853
total citations
FWCI
6.71
Percentile
100%
References
54
Citations per year

Authors

13

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cerebral cortex
  • Magnetic resonance imaging
  • White matter
  • Psychology
  • Orbitofrontal cortex
  • Prefrontal cortex
  • Neuroscience
  • Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)
No related works found for this paper.