Neuroanatomical correlates of different vulnerability states for psychosis and their clinical outcomes

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Abstract

Background: Structural brain abnormalities have been described in individuals with an at-risk mental state for psychosis. However, the neuroanatomical underpinnings of the early and late at-risk mental state relative to clinical outcome remain unclear. Aims: To investigate grey matter volume abnormalities in participants in a putatively early or late at-risk mental state relative to their prospective clinical outcome. Method: Voxel-based morphometry of magnetic resonance imaging data from 20 people with a putatively early at-risk mental state (ARMS-E group) and 26 people with a late at-risk mental state (ARMS-L group) as well as from 15 participants with at-risk mental states with subsequent disease transition (ARMS-T group) and 18 participants without subsequent disease transition (ARMS-NT group) were compared with 75 healthy volunteers. Results: Compared with healthy controls, ARMS-L participants had grey matter volume losses in frontotemporolimbic structures. Participants in the ARMS-E group showed bilateral temporolimbic alterations and subtle prefrontal abnormalities. Participants in the ARMS-T group had prefrontal alterations relative to those in the ARMS-NT group and in the healthy controls that overlapped with the findings in the ARMS-L group. Conclusions: Brain alterations associated with the early at-risk mental state may relate to an elevated susceptibility to psychosis, whereas alterations underlying the late at-risk mental state may indicate a subsequent transition to psychosis.

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Koutsouleris, N., Schmitt, G. J. E., Gaser, C., Bottlender, R., Scheuerecker, J., McGuire, P., … Meisenzahl, E. M. (2009). Neuroanatomical correlates of different vulnerability states for psychosis and their clinical outcomes. British Journal of Psychiatry, 195(3), 218–226. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.108.052068

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