White matter microstructural differences between hallucinating and non-hallucinating schizophrenia spectrum patients

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Abstract

The relation between auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) and white matter has been studied, but results are still inconsistent. This inconsistency may be related to having only a single time-point of AVH assessment in many studies, not capturing that AVH severity fluctuates over time. In the current study, AVH fluctuations were captured by utilizing a longitudinal design and using repeated (Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale) PANSS questionnaire interviews over a 12 month period. We used a Magnetic Resonance Diffusion Tensor Imaging (MR DTI) sequence and tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) to explore white matter differences between two subtypes of schizophrenia patients; 44 hallucinating (AVH+) and 13 non-hallucinating (AVH-), compared to 13 AVH-matched controls and 44 AVH+ matched controls. Additionally, we tested for hemispheric fractional anisotropy (FA) asymmetry between the groups. Significant widespread FA-value reduction was found in the AVH+ group in comparison to the AVH-group. Although not significant, the extracted FA-values for the control group were in between the two patient groups, for all clusters. We also found a significant difference in FA-asymmetry between the AVH+ and AVH-groups in two clusters, with significantly higher leftward asymmetry in the AVH-group. The current findings suggest a possible qualitative difference in white matter integrity between AVH+ and AVH-patients. Strengths and limitations of the study are discussed.

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Beresniewicz, J., Craven, A. R., Hugdahl, K., Løberg, E. M., Kroken, R. A., Johnsen, E., & Grüner, R. (2021). White matter microstructural differences between hallucinating and non-hallucinating schizophrenia spectrum patients. Diagnostics, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11010139

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