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A mega-analysis of vertex and gyral cortical thickness differences in adults with and without PTSD

Authors :
Hong Xie
Erin O'Leary
Chia-Hao Shih
Andrew Cotton
John Wall
Tian Chen
Rong Liu
Kevin Xu
Chadi Abdallah
Elpiniki Andrew
C. Lexi Baird
Lee Baugh
Jessica Bomyea
Steven Bruce
Richard Bryant
Kyle Choi
Judith Daniels
Nicholas Davenport
Richard Davidson
Micheal De Bellis
Emily Dennis
Terri deRoon-Cassini
Seth Disner
Negar Fani
Kelene Fercho
Jacklynn Fitzgerald
Gina Forster
Jessie Frijling
Elbert Geuze
Hassan Gomaa
Evan Gordon
Daniel Grupe
Ilan Harpaz-Rotem
Courtney Haswell
Julia Herzog
Davia Hofmann
Micheal Hollifield
Bobak Hosseini
Anna Hudson
Jonathan Ipser
Neda Jahanshad
Tanja Jovanovic
Milissa Kaufman
Anthony King
Saskia koch
Inga Koerte
Sheri-Michelle Koopowitz
Mayuresh Korgaonkar
John Krystal
Christine Larson
Lauren Lebois
Ifat Levy
Gen Li
Mark Logue
Vincent Magnotta
Antje Manthey
Geoffrey May
Katie McLaughlin
Sven Mueller
Laura Nawijn
null Nelson
Yuval Neria
Jack Nitschke
Miranda Olff
Elizabeth Olson
Matthew Peverill
K Luan Phan
Faisal Rashid
Kerry Ressler
Isabelle Rosso
Lauren Salminen
Kelly Sambrook
Freda Scheffler
Christian Schmahl
Martha Shenton
Anika Sierk
Jeffrey Simons
Raluca Simons
Scott Sponheim
Dan Stein
Murray Stein
Jennifer Stevens
Thomas Straube
Benjamin Suarez-Jimenez
Marijo Tamburrino
Sophia Thomopoulos
Nic van der Wee
Steven van der Werff
Theo van Erp
Sanne van Rooij
Mirjam van Zuiden
Tim Varkevisser
Dick Veltman
Robert Vermeiren
Henrik Walter
Li Wang
Xi Zhu
Ye Zhu
Paul Thompson
Xin Wang
Rajendra Morey
Israel Liberzon
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

A number of studies of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) report thinner cerebral cortical gyri using gyrus-based analysis or thinner foci within the gyri using vertex-based analysis. However, the locations of these findings are inconsistent across studies, and the spatial transformations required during vertex-based analysis may affect the focal findings. A mega-analysis using a large number of subjects from multiple PTSD studies could potentially identify more reproducible cortical thickness abnormalities. Investigating both the vertex and gyral thicknesses simultaneously may verify the vertex-based focal findings using gyral data without imposing any spatial transformation. Here we aggregated data from 24 international laboratories using ENIGMA standardized procedures for 949 adult PTSD patients and 1493 controls without PTSD (age 18 to 65 years). We examined whether gyral and vertex cortical thickness are (a) different between subjects with PTSD and controls and (b) associated with PTSD symptom severity in trauma-exposed subjects. Regions with overlapping thinner cortical gyri and thinner vertex clusters were located in frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital cortices. Thinner right lateral orbitofrontal and right lingual gyri and concomitantly thinner vertex clusters in the anterior portions of both gyri were associated with PTSD symptom severity. Convergent findings in these locations suggest focally thinner cortex in these gyri, which may be involved in altered processing and regulation of emotion and sensory inputs underlying posttraumatic stress symptoms.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cbd93205017a9c3f3f1b41f378010a96