The 'White Matter' of
Schizophrenia
(July 7, 2007) -- An important international study has identified 'white
matter' abnormalities in the brain as an underlying cause of the
symptoms of
schizophrenia.
Dr Thomas Whitford, from the University of Sydney's Brain Dynamics Centre
based at the Westmead Millennium Institute, studied white matter
abnormalities in patients with first episode schizophrenia, and looked at
whether there was progressive white matter pathology in the disease.
White matter is one of the two main solid components of the central
nervous system. It is composed of myelinated nerve cell processes, or axons,
which connect various gray matter areas (the locations of nerve cell bodies)
of the brain to each other and carry nerve impulses between neurons.
Volumetric White Matter Abnormalities in First-Episode Schizophrenia; A
Longitudinal, Tensor-Based Morphometry Study, published in the American
Journal of Psychiatry this month, includes analysis of MRI scans on 41
patients with first episode schizophrenia, 25 of whom returned for a second
scan between 2 and 3 years later.
The first-episode schizophrenia patents exhibited volumetric deficits in
the white matter of the frontal and temporal lobes at baseline, as well as
volumetric increases in the white matter of the frontoparietal junction
bilaterally.
'We also found these patients lost considerably more white matter over
the follow-up interval, relative to comparison subjects in the middle and
inferior temporal cortex bilaterally,' said Dr Whitford.
While schizophrenia has long been considered to be a disorder of brain
connectivity, few studies have investigated white matter abnormalities in
patients with first episode schizophrenia. Even fewer studies have
investigated whether there is progressive white matter pathology in the
disease.
'Given the role that white matter plays in connecting disparate regions
of neural tissues and in modulating the transmission velocities of action
potentials, volumetric white matter abnormalities, as have been reported in
the present study, could be expected to result in a dysfunction in neural
communication,' said Dr Whitford.
'The fact that we observed the white matter of the frontal and temporal
lobes to be especially affected in patents with first-episode schizophrenia
adds support to theories that have argued that a breakdown in frontal
temporal connectivity as being the underlying
cause of schizophrenia.'
Source: ScienceAlert.com.au
Last updated: 07/07
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