Córdova-Palomera A, Alemany S, Falcón C, Bargalló N, Goldberg X, Crespo-Facorro B, Nenadic I, Fañanás L
Unidad de Antropología, Departamento de Biología Animal, Facultad de Biología and Instituto de Biomedicina (IBUB), Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Diagonal, 643, 08028 Barcelona, Spain; Centro de Investigaciones Biomédicas en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), C/Doctor Esquerdo, 46, 28007 Madrid, Spain.
Medical Image Core Facility, the Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), C/Rosselló, 149-153, 08036 Barcelona, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red en Bioingeniería, Biomedicina y Nanomedicina (CIBER-BBN), C/Poeta Mariano Esquillor, s/n, 50018 Zaragoza, Spain.
J Psychiatr Res. 2014 Sep;56:144-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2014.05.014. Epub 2014 May 27.
Season of birth has been shown to influence risk for several neuropsychiatric diseases. Furthermore, it has been suggested that season of birth modifies a number of brain morphological traits. Since cortical thickness alterations have been reported across some levels of the psychosis-spectrum, this study was aimed at i) assessing the scarcely explored relationship between cortical thickness and severity of subclinical psychotic experiences (PEs) in healthy subjects, and ii) evaluating the potential impact of season of birth in the preceding thickness-PEs relationship. As both PEs and brain cortical features are heritable, the current work used monozygotic twins to separately evaluate familial and unique environmental factors. High-resolution structural MRI scans of 48 twins (24 monozygotic pairs) were analyzed to estimate cortical thickness using FreeSurfer. They were then examined in relation to PEs, accounting for the effects of birth season; putative differential relationships between PEs and cortical thickness depending on season of birth were also tested. Current results support previous findings indicative of cortical thickening in healthy individuals with high psychometrically assessed psychosis scores, probably in line with theories of compensatory aspects of brain features in non-clinical populations. Additionally, they suggest distinct patterns of cortical thickness-PEs relationships depending on birth seasonality. Familial factors underlying the presence of PEs may drive these effects.
出生季节已被证明会影响多种神经精神疾病的风险。此外,有人提出出生季节会改变一些大脑形态特征。由于在精神病谱的某些层面已报道存在皮质厚度改变,本研究旨在:i)评估健康受试者中皮质厚度与亚临床精神病体验(PEs)严重程度之间鲜少被探究的关系;ii)评估出生季节对上述厚度-PEs关系的潜在影响。由于PEs和大脑皮质特征均具有遗传性,本研究采用同卵双胞胎来分别评估家族因素和独特环境因素。对48对双胞胎(24对同卵双胞胎)的高分辨率结构MRI扫描进行分析,使用FreeSurfer估计皮质厚度。然后根据出生季节的影响,对他们与PEs的关系进行检查;还测试了根据出生季节PEs与皮质厚度之间可能存在的差异关系。当前结果支持先前的研究发现,即心理测量评估的精神病得分较高的健康个体存在皮质增厚,这可能与非临床人群大脑特征的代偿方面理论相符。此外,研究结果表明,根据出生季节的不同,皮质厚度与PEs的关系存在不同模式。PEs存在背后的家族因素可能驱动了这些效应。