SS-02-01
Neural networks involved in hallucinations: Integrating structure and function
T. Dierks, D. Hubl, R. Kreis, K. Lӧvblad, W. Strik. Bern, Switzerland
Objective: It has been suggested that alterations in connectivity between frontal and temporal speech-related areas might contribute to pathogenesis of auditory hallucinations and that these circuits are assumed to become dysfunctional during the generation and monitoring of inner speech. Using MR diffusion imaging to assess the directionality of cortical white matter (WM) tracts, we investigated whether previously described abnormal activation patterns observed during auditory hallucinations relate to changes in structural interconnections between frontal and temporal speechrelated areas.
Methods: WM directionality (Fractional anisotropy; FA) was assessed in patients prone to auditory hallucinations, in patients without auditory hallucinations, and in healthy control subjects. Structural MR imaging was conducted. A ROI analysis was computed based on an ANOVA for FA maps restricted to WM. Additionally, descriptive voxel-based t tests between the groups were computed
Results: Patients with hallucinations demonstrated significantly higher WM directionality in the lateral parts of the temporoparietal section of the arcuate fasciculus and in the anterior corpus callosum compared with control subjects and nonhallucinating patients. Comparing hallucinating patients with nonhallucinating patients we found significant differences most pronounced in left hemispheric fiber bundles, including the cingulate bundle.
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that during inner speech, the alterations of white matter fiber tracts in patients with frequent hallucinations lead to abnormal coactivation in regions related to the acoustical processing of external stimuli. This abnormal activation may account for the patients' inability to distinguish selfgenerated thoughts from external stimulation.
SS-02-02
Brain folding in schizophrenia
J. L. Martinot, A. Cachia, T. Kircher. Orsay, France
Objective: The most striking, yet poorly understood gross morphological features of the human cerebral cortex are the diverse and complex arrangements of its foldings: the sulci and gyri. Cortical folds are formed during fetal age and childhood (Chi et al. 1977). It has been suggested that abnormal maturation could be a risk factor for schizophrenia (Lewis and Lewitt 2001). Precise evaluations of the folding patterns could then provide cues of the neurodevelopmental aspects related to the pathology (LeProvost et al. 2003).
Methods: We apply new brain morphometry tools providing automatically 3D sulci shape descriptors (surface and depth) from MRI data (Mangin et al. 2004; Cachia et al. 2003). This methods avoids the bias inherent to the image analysis procedures using spatial normalisation. MRI datasets from 30 patients with schizophrenia are compared with 30 controls matched for gender, age, and handedness. MRI were acquired on 1.5 T imagers with sequences providing high contrast between gray and white matters. Sulci were automatically segmented from MR images using Brainvisa software (http:#brainvisa.info). The heteromodal cortex was investigated, as impaired maturation was hypothesised in these cortical regions in schizophrenia. The Superior Temporal, Frontal and Cingulate sulci (main folds and branches) were automatically delineated, labelled and measured.
Results: Preliminary results from a subset of subjects indicate differences in sulci morphology and asymetry between groups. They are being validated on the whole samples. Conclusion: Results will be presented during the symposium. Applied on all brain folds, this automatic procedure might highlight regions with developmental variations.
SS-02-03
Auditory hallucinations and the brain in schizophrenia
P. McGuire. Institute of Psychiatry, King', London, United Kingdom
Objectives: Auditory verbal hallucinations are a key feature of schizophrenia. Neuroimaging provides a way of investigating the mechanisms that underlie them in vivo.
Methods: Functional neuroimaging studies have measured 'regional brain activity while subjects were actually experiencing hallucinations and contrasted this with activity when hallucinations were absent. Another strategy has been to examine cognitive processes that are putatively defective in patients who are prone to hallucinations, and compare the neural correlates of these processes with those in patients who do not experience hallucinations. These functional imaging studies have been complemented by investigations using structural imaging which have examined the grey and white matter correlates of hallucinations.
Results: Overall, functional neuroimaging studies studies suggest that auditory verbal hallucinations involve brain areas that are normally responsible for the generation and perception of verbal material. Patients who are prone to hallucinations show functional changes in the lateral temporal, parahippocampal and cerebellar cortices. There are some structural imaging data that suggest that hallucinations are associated with changes in the volume and connections of these areas, but these findings have not been consistently replicated.
Conclusions: The existing neuroimaging data are consistent with cognitive models that propose that auditory verbal hallucinations represent inner speech which has been misidentified as alien.
SS-02-04
Neural correlates of thought and language processes
T. Kircher. Klinik für Psychiatrie u. Psychotherapie, RWTH, Aachen, Germany
Objective: Alterations in thought and language are core symptoms of schizophrenia. Studies with structural and functional imaging (fMRI) as well as magneto/electroencephalography (EEG, MEG) on language in schizohrenia will be selectively described. A model will be presented, where brain structure, function, receptorchemistry, cognitive deficits and psychopathology of language related phenomena are integrated. A diffuse brain trauma (genetic, viral) during fetal neurodevelopment results in pathological cell migration, mediated through Relin, within the superior temporal gyrus. Consequently, alterations of the glutamate receptor system and decreased mismatch negativity have been described in schizophrenia. These structural and biochemical changes result in a dysruption of the normal cerebral language lateralisation during childhood. As a result, the mental lexicon, normally in the left superior temporal gyms, is reversed in adult schizophrenic patients. The production of thought disordered speech is in part due to a decreased activation of the Wemicke Area and the recruitment of the right mental lexicon with its diffuse semantic fields.
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