Cortical thickness in individuals with non-clinical and clinical psychotic symptoms

R. Van Lutterveld, M.P. Van Den Heuvel, K.M.J. Diederen, A.D. De Weijer, M.J.H. Begemann, R.M. Brouwer, K. Daalman, J.D. Blom, R.S. Kahn, I.E. Sommer

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

© The Author (2014).Symptoms that are linked to psychosis are also experienced by individuals who are not in need of care. In the present study, cortical thickness was investigated in these individuals. Fifty individuals with non-clinical auditory verbal hallucinations (most of them also experienced other non-clinical psychotic symptoms), 50 patients with a psychotic disorder and auditory verbal hallucinations, and 50 healthy control subjects underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging. Data were analysed using FreeSurfer. Cortical thickness in the pars orbitalis, paracentral lobule, fusiform gyrus and inferior temporal gyrus was lowest in patients, intermediate in the non-clinical hallucinating group, and highest in control subjects. The patients also showed thinning in widespread additional areas compared to the two other groups, whereas both hallucinating groups showed similar levels of thinning in the insula. Ranking the levels of cortical thickness per brain region across groups revealed that for 88% of brain regions, cortical thickness was lowest in patients, intermediate in the non-clinical hallucinating group, and highest in controls. These findings show that individuals with non-clinical psychotic symptoms show a similar but less pronounced pattern of cortical thinning as patients with a psychotic disorder, which is suggestive of a similar, but milder underlying pathophysiology in this group compared to the psychosis group.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2664-2669
JournalBrain
Volume137
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes

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