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  • Multicenter Voxel-Based Mor...
    de Wit, Stella J.; Alonso, Pino; Schweren, Lizanne; Mataix-Cols, David; Lochner, Christine; Menchón, José M.; Stein, Dan J.; Fouche, Jean-Paul; Soriano-Mas, Carles; Sato, Joao R.; Hoexter, Marcelo Q.; Denys, Damiaan; Nakamae, Takashi; Nishida, Seiji; Kwon, Jun Soo; Jang, Joon Hwan; Busatto, Geraldo F.; Cardoner, Narcís; Cath, Danielle C.; Fukui, Kenji; Jung, Wi Hoon; Kim, Sung Nyun; Miguel, Euripides C.; Narumoto, Jin; Phillips, Mary L.; Pujol, Jesus; Remijnse, Peter L.; Sakai, Yuki; Shin, Na Young; Yamada, Kei; Veltman, Dick J.; van den Heuvel, Odile A.

    The American journal of psychiatry, 03/2014, Letnik: 171, Številka: 3
    Journal Article

    The effect of persistent symptoms or compensatory processes related to cognitive dysfunction in obsessive-compulsive disorder may contribute to brain structure alterations in OCD, indicating that age is an important factor in evaluating changes in gray and white matter volumes. ObjectiveResults from structural neuroimaging studies of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) have been only partially consistent. The authors sought to assess regional gray and white matter volume differences between large samples of OCD patients and healthy comparison subjects and their relation with demographic and clinical variables.MethodA multicenter voxel-based morphometry mega-analysis was performed on 1.5-T structural T1-weighted MRI scans derived from the International OCD Brain Imaging Consortium. Regional gray and white matter brain volumes were compared between 412 adult OCD patients and 368 healthy subjects.ResultsRelative to healthy comparison subjects, OCD patients had significantly smaller volumes of frontal gray and white matter bilaterally, including the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, the anterior cingulate cortex, and the inferior frontal gyrus extending to the anterior insula. Patients also showed greater cerebellar gray matter volume bilaterally compared with healthy subjects. Group differences in frontal gray and white matter volume were significant after correction for multiple comparisons. Additionally, group-by-age interactions were observed in the putamen, insula, and orbitofrontal cortex (indicating relative preservation of volume in patients compared with healthy subjects with increasing age) and in the temporal cortex bilaterally (indicating a relative loss of volume in patients compared with healthy subjects with increasing age).ConclusionsThese findings partially support the prevailing fronto-striatal models of OCD and offer additional insights into the neuroanatomy of the disorder that were not apparent from previous smaller studies. The group-by-age interaction effects in orbitofrontal-striatal and (para)limbic brain regions may be the result of altered neuroplasticity associated with chronic compulsive behaviors, anxiety, or compensatory processes related to cognitive dysfunction.