Mathalon Daniel H, Pfefferbaum Adolf, Lim Kelvin O, Rosenbloom Margaret J, Sullivan Edith V
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine/Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven 06516, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2003 Mar;60(3):245-52. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.60.3.245.
Schizophrenia and alcoholism are characterized by brain volume abnormalities. Despite the frequent comorbidity of these conditions, the potentially compounded effects of comorbidity on brain structure have seldom been rigorously assessed.
To determine the compounding effect of schizophrenia and alcoholism on regional brain volumes, we performed retrospective quantitative analysis of magnetic resonance images from men who participated in research protocols at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, Calif. Participants were selected on the basis of diagnostic criteria, yielding 4 comparison groups: 35 men comorbid for DSM-III-R schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and lifetime alcohol abuse or dependence; 64 men with DSM-III-R schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder; 62 men with Research Diagnostic Criteria alcoholism; and 62 healthy men screened to exclude any Axis I diagnosis or heavy alcohol use. The comorbid group matched the schizophrenia group on age and illness severity but was younger and drank 5 times less alcohol in their lifetimes than the alcoholism group. Gray and white matter volumes from 6 cortical regions were expressed as age- and head size-corrected z scores and were subjected to multivariate profile analyses.
Gray matter volume deficits were present in all 3 patient groups but were greatest in the comorbid group. In the comorbid group, the most prominent volume deficits were in the prefrontal and anterior superior temporal regions.
Despite lower alcohol exposure than in pure alcoholism, the comorbidity of schizophrenia with alcoholism has a particularly profound effect on prefrontal gray matter volume, compounding the prominent prefrontal deficits present independently in schizophrenia and alcoholism.
精神分裂症和酒精中毒的特征是脑容量异常。尽管这两种疾病常合并存在,但合并症对脑结构的潜在复合影响很少得到严格评估。
为了确定精神分裂症和酒精中毒对局部脑容量的复合影响,我们对参与加利福尼亚州帕洛阿尔托退伍军人事务医疗系统研究方案的男性的磁共振图像进行了回顾性定量分析。根据诊断标准选择参与者,产生4个比较组:35名患有DSM-III-R精神分裂症或分裂情感障碍且有终生酒精滥用或依赖的男性;64名患有DSM-III-R精神分裂症或分裂情感障碍的男性;62名符合研究诊断标准的酒精中毒男性;以及62名经过筛查以排除任何轴I诊断或大量饮酒的健康男性。合并症组在年龄和疾病严重程度上与精神分裂症组匹配,但比酒精中毒组年轻,终生饮酒量少5倍。来自6个皮质区域的灰质和白质体积以年龄和头部大小校正的z分数表示,并进行多变量概况分析。
所有3个患者组均存在灰质体积减少,但在合并症组中最为明显。在合并症组中,最显著的体积减少发生在额叶前部和颞上叶前部区域。
尽管与单纯酒精中毒相比酒精暴露较少,但精神分裂症与酒精中毒的合并症对额叶灰质体积有特别深远的影响,加剧了精神分裂症和酒精中毒中独立存在的显著额叶缺陷。