Tang Y, Pasternak O, Kubicki M, Rathi Y, Zhang T, Wang J, Li H, Woodberry KA, Xu L, Qian Z, Zhu A, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Keshavan MS, Niznikiewicz M, Stone WS, McCarley RW, Shenton ME, Wang J, Seidman LJ
Am J Psychiatry 2019 Oct;176(10):820-828
PMID: 31230461
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Detecting brain abnormalities in clinical high-risk populations before the onset of psychosis is important for tracking pathological pathways and for identifying possible intervention strategies that may impede or prevent the onset of psychotic disorders. Co-occurring cellular and extracellular white matter alterations have previously been implicated after a first psychotic episode. The authors investigated whether or not cellular and extracellular alterations are already present in a predominantly medication-naive cohort of clinical high-risk individuals experiencing attenuated psychotic symptoms.
METHODS: Fifty individuals at clinical high risk, of whom 40 were never medicated, were compared with 50 healthy control subjects, group-matched for age, gender, and parental socioeconomic status. 3-T multishell diffusion MRI data were obtained to estimate free-water imaging white matter measures, including fractional anisotropy of cellular tissue (FA) and the volume fraction of extracellular free water (FW).
RESULTS: Significantly lower FA was observed in the clinical high-risk group compared with the healthy control group, but no statistically significant FW alterations were observed between groups. Lower FA in the clinical high-risk group was significantly associated with a decline in Global Assessment of Functioning Scale (GAF) score compared with highest GAF score in the previous 12 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Cellular but not extracellular alterations characterized the clinical high-risk group, especially in those who experienced a decline in functioning. These cellular changes suggest an early deficit that possibly reflects a predisposition to develop attenuated psychotic symptoms. In contrast, extracellular alterations were not observed in this clinical high-risk sample, suggesting that previously reported extracellular abnormalities may reflect an acute response to psychosis, which plays a more prominent role closer to or at onset of psychosis.
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