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   Brain volumes in psychotic youth with schizophrenia and mood disorders  
   
نویسنده el-sayed m. ,grant steen r. ,poe m.d. ,carter bethea t. ,gerig g. ,lieberman j. ,sikich l.
منبع journal of psychiatry and neuroscience - 2010 - دوره : 35 - شماره : 4 - صفحه:229 -236
چکیده    Background: we sought to test the hypothesis that deficits in grey matter volume are characteristic of psychotic youth with early-onset schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (eoss) but not of psychotic youth with early-onset mood disorders (eomd). methods: we used magnetic resonance imaging to examine brain volume in 24 psychotic youth (13 male,11 female) with eoss (n = 12) or eomd (n = 12) and 17 healthy controls (10 male,7 female). we measured the volume of grey and white matter using an automated segmentation program. results: after adjustment for age and intracranial volume,whole brain volume was lower in the eoss patients than in the healthy controls (p = 0.001) and eomd patients (p = 0.002). the eoss patients had a deficit in grey matter volume (p = 0.005),especially in the frontal (p = 0.003) and parietal (p = 0.006) lobes,with no significant differences in white matter volume. limitations: the main limitations of our study were its small sample size and the inclusion of patients with depression and mania in the affective group. conclusion: adolescents with eoss have grey matter deficits compared with healthy controls and psychotic adolescents with eomd. our results suggest that grey matter deficits are not generally associated with psychosis but may be specifically associated with schizophrenia. larger studies with consistent methods are needed to reconcile the contradictory findings among imaging studies involving psychotic youth. © 2010 canadian medical association.
آدرس department of psychiatry,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc,united states,department of psychiatry,mansoura university,mansoura, Egypt, department of psychiatry,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc, United States, frank porter graham child development center,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc, United States, department of psychiatry,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc, United States, department of psychiatry,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc,united states,departments of psychiatry,computer science and bioengineering,university of utah,salt lake city,ut, United States, department of psychiatry,columbia university,new york,ny, United States, department of psychiatry,university of north carolina,chapel hill,nc, United States
 
     
   
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