Department of Psychiatry, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2009 Nov;34(6):443-9.
Anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) abnormalities have been implicated consistently in the pathophysiology of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), yet it remains unclear whether these abnormalities originated during early neurodevelopment. In this study, we examined the ACC sulcal/gyral patterns to investigate whether neurodevelopmental anomalies of the ACC were present in patients with OCD. We hypothesized that patients with OCD would show reduced cortical folding of the ACC compared with controls.
We used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of 169 healthy volunteers and 110 patients with OCD to examine the paracingulate sulcus and cingulate sulcus. We assessed cortical folding patterns according to established classification criteria and constructed 3 categories of paracingulate sulcus morphology according to its presence and anteroposterior extent: "prominent," "present" and "absent." We classified the cingulate sulcus as "interrupted" or "continuous" according to the interruptions in its course. In addition, we evaluated ACC sulcal asymmetry based on interhemispheric comparisons of paracingulate sulcus morphology.
Analyses revealed that patients with OCD were significantly less likely than controls to show a well-developed left paracingulate sulcus: 50.0% of patients and 65.1% of controls showed a "prominent" or "present" paracingulate sulcus in the left hemisphere. However, there were no differences in regard to cingulate sulcus continuity, and patients also showed the same leftward ACC sulcal asymmetry as controls.
Our study was limited by the fact that we obtained the MRI scans from 2 different scanners, and we did not calculate cerebral fissurization as our study was restricted to 1 specific brain region. Moreover, patients and controls differed significantly in terms of sex ratio and IQ, although we controlled these variables as covariates.
Our findings imply a subtle deviation in the early neurodevelopment of the ACC in patients with OCD, but the extent to which these anomalies contributed to the pathogenesis of OCD remains unclear. Further studies that link the ACC morphologic anomalies to the pathophysiology of OCD are recommended.
前扣带皮层(ACC)的异常与强迫症(OCD)的病理生理学一直有关联,但目前尚不清楚这些异常是否起源于早期神经发育。在这项研究中,我们检查了 ACC 的脑回脑沟模式,以研究 OCD 患者是否存在 ACC 的神经发育异常。我们假设 OCD 患者的 ACC 皮质折叠会比对照组减少。
我们使用 169 名健康志愿者和 110 名 OCD 患者的磁共振成像(MRI)来检查旁扣带沟和扣带沟。我们根据既定的分类标准评估皮质折叠模式,并根据其存在和前后范围构建 3 种旁扣带沟形态类别:“明显”、“存在”和“不存在”。我们根据扣带沟的中断将其分为“中断”或“连续”。此外,我们根据旁扣带沟形态的半球间比较来评估 ACC 脑沟的不对称性。
分析表明,与对照组相比,OCD 患者明显不太可能表现出发育良好的左旁扣带沟:50.0%的患者和 65.1%的对照组的左半球显示出“明显”或“存在”的旁扣带沟。然而,在扣带沟连续性方面没有差异,并且患者也表现出与对照组相同的左 ACC 脑沟不对称性。
我们的研究受到以下事实的限制:我们从 2 台不同的扫描仪获得了 MRI 扫描,并且由于我们的研究仅限于 1 个特定的脑区,因此我们没有计算脑裂化。此外,尽管我们将这些变量作为协变量进行了控制,但患者和对照组在性别比例和智商方面存在显著差异。
我们的发现表明 OCD 患者的 ACC 早期神经发育存在微妙偏差,但这些异常在多大程度上导致 OCD 的发病机制尚不清楚。建议进一步研究将 ACC 形态异常与 OCD 的病理生理学联系起来。