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Distinct inter-hemispheric dysconnectivity in schizophrenia patients with and without auditory verbal hallucinations
- Source :
- Scientific Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Evidence from behavioral, electrophysiological and diffusion-weighted imaging studies suggest that schizophrenia patients suffer from deficiencies in bilateral brain communication and this disruption may be related to the occurrence of auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH). To increase our understanding of aberrant inter-hemispheric communication in relation to AVH, we recruited two groups of first-episode schizophrenia patients: one group with AVH (N = 18 AVH patients) and one without hallucinations (N = 18 Non-AVH patients) and 20 healthy controls. All participants received T1 structural imaging and resting-state fMRI scanning. We adopted a newly developed index, voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity (VMHC), to quantitatively describe bilateral functional connectivity. The whole-brain VMHC measure was compared among the three groups and correlation analyses were conducted between symptomology scores and neurological measures. Our findings suggest all patients shared abnormalities in parahippocampus and striatum. Aberrant bilateral connectivity of default mode network (DMN), inferior frontal gyrus and cerebellum only showed in AVH patients, whereas aberrances in superior temporal gyrus and precentral gyrus were specific to Non-AVH patients. Meanwhile, inter-hemispheric connectivity of DMN correlated with patients’ symptomatology scores. This study corroborates that schizophrenia is characterized by inter-hemispheric dysconnectivity and suggests the localization of such abnormalities may be crucial to whether auditory verbal hallucinations develop.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Cerebellum
medicine.medical_specialty
Hallucinations
Hippocampus
behavioral disciplines and activities
Brain mapping
Article
Temporal lobe
Young Adult
mental disorders
medicine
Humans
Young adult
Psychiatry
Brain Mapping
Multidisciplinary
medicine.diagnostic_test
business.industry
Magnetic resonance imaging
medicine.disease
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Corpus Striatum
Temporal Lobe
Frontal Lobe
medicine.anatomical_structure
Frontal lobe
Schizophrenia
Female
business
Neuroscience
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20452322
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scientific Reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4eabc23508d97d506090be8e704917f9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/srep11218