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![]() Journal of Child Psychology and PsychiatryVolume 47 Issue 10, Pages 1003 - 1012 Published Online: 26 Oct 2006 Journal Compilation © 2010 ACAMH Published on behalf of the Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 380K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Childhood onset schizophrenia: cortical brain abnormalities as young adults Copyright 2006 The Authors Journal compilation 2006 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health KEYWORDS Childhood onset schizophrenia • MRI • cortical thickness • development • neurodevelopment • schizophrenia ABSTRACTBackground: Childhood onset schizophrenia (COS) is a rare but severe form of the adult onset disorder. While structural brain imaging studies show robust, widespread, and progressive gray matter loss in COS during adolescence, there have been no longitudinal studies of sufficient duration to examine comparability with the more common adult onset illness. Methods: Neuro-anatomic magnetic resonance scans were obtained prospectively from ages 7 through 26 in 70 children diagnosed with COS and age and sex matched healthy controls. Cortical thickness was measured at 40,962 points across the cerebral hemispheres using a novel, fully automated, validated method. Patterns of patient–control differences in cortical development were compared over a 19-year period. Results: Throughout the age range, the COS group had significantly smaller mean cortical thickness compared to controls. However, the COS brain developmental trajectory appeared to normalize in posterior (parietal) regions, and remained divergent in the anterior regions (frontal and temporal) regions, and the pattern of loss became more like that seen in adults. Conclusions: Cortical thickness loss in COS appears to localize with age to prefrontal and temporal regions that are seen for both medication naïve and medicated adult onset patients. Manuscript accepted 18 April 2006 |
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![]() | 50th Anniversary Special Issue |
![]() | The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry |
