Article (Scientific journals)
Reduced white matter integrity in sibling pairs discordant for bipolar disorder.
Sprooten, Emma; Brumbaugh, Margaret S.; Knowles, Emma E. M. et al.
2013In American Journal of Psychiatry, 170 (11), p. 1317-25
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Keywords :
Adult; Anisotropy; Bipolar Disorder/genetics/pathology; Brain/pathology; Case-Control Studies; Female; Humans; Male; Neuroimaging; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Siblings/psychology
Abstract :
[en] OBJECTIVE: Several lines of evidence indicate that white matter integrity is compromised in bipolar disorder, but the nature, extent, and biological causes remain elusive. To determine the extent to which white matter deficits in bipolar disorder are familial, the authors investigated white matter integrity in a large sample of bipolar patients, unaffected siblings, and healthy comparison subjects. METHOD: The authors collected diffusion imaging data for 64 adult bipolar patients, 60 unaffected siblings (including 54 discordant sibling pairs), and 46 demographically matched comparison subjects. Fractional anisotropy was compared between the groups using voxel-wise tract-based spatial statistics and by extracting mean fractional anisotropy from 10 regions of interest. Additionally, intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated between the sibling pairs as an index of familiality. RESULTS: Widespread fractional anisotropy reductions in bipolar patients (>40,000 voxels) and more subtle reductions in their siblings, mainly restricted to the corpus callosum, posterior thalamic radiations, and left superior longitudinal fasciculus (>2,000 voxels) were observed. Similarly, region-of-interest analysis revealed significant reductions in most white matter regions in patients. In siblings, fractional anisotropy in the posterior thalamic radiation and the forceps was nominally reduced. Significant between-sibling correlations were found for mean fractional anisotropy across the tract-based spatial statistic skeleton, within significant clusters, and within nearly all regions of interest. CONCLUSIONS: These findings emphasize the relevance of white matter to neuropathology and familiality of bipolar disorder and encourage further use of white matter integrity markers as endophenotypes in genetic studies.
Disciplines :
Psychiatry
Anatomy (cytology, histology, embryology...) & physiology
Author, co-author :
Sprooten, Emma
Brumbaugh, Margaret S.
Knowles, Emma E. M.
McKay, D. Reese
Lewis, John
Barrett, Jennifer
Landau, Stefanie
Cyr, Lindsay
Kochunov, Peter
Winkler, Anderson ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Form. doc. sc. bioméd. & pharma.
Pearlson, Godfrey D.
Glahn, David C.
Language :
English
Title :
Reduced white matter integrity in sibling pairs discordant for bipolar disorder.
Publication date :
2013
Journal title :
American Journal of Psychiatry
ISSN :
0002-953X
eISSN :
1535-7228
Publisher :
American Psychiatric Publishing, United States - Virginia
Volume :
170
Issue :
11
Pages :
1317-25
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 03 May 2017

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