Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Nemours/Alfred I. DuPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE, USA.
Brain. 2018 Sep 1;141(9):2670-2684. doi: 10.1093/brain/awy199.
Stuttering is a neurodevelopmental disorder that affects the smooth flow of speech production. Stuttering onset occurs during a dynamic period of development when children first start learning to formulate sentences. Although most children grow out of stuttering naturally, ∼1% of all children develop persistent stuttering that can lead to significant psychosocial consequences throughout one's life. To date, few studies have examined neural bases of stuttering in children who stutter, and even fewer have examined the basis for natural recovery versus persistence of stuttering. Here we report the first study to conduct surface-based analysis of the brain morphometric measures in children who stutter. We used FreeSurfer to extract cortical size and shape measures from structural MRI scans collected from the initial year of a longitudinal study involving 70 children (36 stuttering, 34 controls) in the 3-10-year range. The stuttering group was further divided into two groups: persistent and recovered, based on their later longitudinal visits that allowed determination of their eventual clinical outcome. A region of interest analysis that focused on the left hemisphere speech network and a whole-brain exploratory analysis were conducted to examine group differences and group × age interaction effects. We found that the persistent group could be differentiated from the control and recovered groups by reduced cortical thickness in left motor and lateral premotor cortical regions. The recovered group showed an age-related decrease in local gyrification in the left medial premotor cortex (supplementary motor area and and pre-supplementary motor area). These results provide strong evidence of a primary deficit in the left hemisphere speech network, specifically involving lateral premotor cortex and primary motor cortex, in persistent developmental stuttering. Results further point to a possible compensatory mechanism involving left medial premotor cortex in those who recover from childhood stuttering.
口吃是一种神经发育障碍,影响言语产生的流畅性。口吃的发病发生在儿童开始学习造句的发展动态时期。尽管大多数儿童自然会摆脱口吃,但仍有约 1%的儿童发展为持续性口吃,这可能会导致一生中产生重大的社会心理后果。迄今为止,很少有研究检查口吃儿童的口吃神经基础,甚至更少研究口吃自然恢复与持续的基础。在这里,我们报告了第一项对口吃儿童进行基于表面的大脑形态计量学测量的研究。我们使用 FreeSurfer 从参与一项涉及 70 名儿童(36 名口吃,34 名对照组)的纵向研究的初始年度的结构 MRI 扫描中提取皮质大小和形状测量值。根据他们后来的纵向访问,可以确定他们的最终临床结果,将口吃组进一步分为持续性和恢复性两组。进行了一个重点关注左侧半球言语网络的感兴趣区域分析和全脑探索性分析,以检查组间差异和组×年龄交互作用效应。我们发现,持续性组可以通过左侧运动和外侧前运动皮质区域的皮质厚度减少与对照组和恢复组区分开来。恢复组在左侧内侧前运动皮质(补充运动区和前补充运动区)中显示出与年龄相关的局部脑回减少。这些结果为持续性发育性口吃中左侧半球言语网络(特别是涉及外侧前运动皮质和初级运动皮质)存在主要缺陷提供了有力证据。结果进一步表明,在从儿童口吃中恢复的人群中,可能存在涉及左侧内侧前运动皮质的代偿机制。