Volumetric investigation of brain regions in patients with conversion disorder.

Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry

Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Firat University, 23119 Elazig, Turkey.

Published: June 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • Preliminary evidence indicates a decrease in blood flow in brain regions like the thalamus and basal ganglia, pointing to a potential functional disorder in certain brain circuits in patients with conversion disorder (CD).
  • There is a lack of systematic structural MRI studies on CD, prompting a new study to assess brain volumes using MRI in ten women with CD compared to ten healthy subjects.
  • Results showed that women with CD had significantly smaller volumes in specific brain structures, notably the caudate and lentiform nuclei, and the thalamus, suggesting structural differences that could inform a modern understanding of hysteria.

Article Abstract

Preliminary evidence revealed a decrease of regional cerebral blood flow in the thalamus and basal ganglia contralateral to the deficit and suggested that hysterical conversion deficits might entail a functional disorder in striatothalamocortical circuits. However, there is no systematic structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study in the literature in patients with conversion disorder (CD). Therefore, we aimed to perform structural MRI to evaluate the brain regions of interest in first applying patients with CD. Morphometric MRI was used to compare regional brain volumes in ten women with CD and same number of healthy comparison subjects. Intracranial volume (ICV), whole brain volume, gray and white matter volumes did not differ between the patient and control groups. Patients with CD had significantly smaller mean volumes of the left caudate nucleus, lentiform nucleus (p<0.01 for caudate nucleus and p<0.05 for lentiform nucleus) and right caudate nucleus and lentiform nucleus (p<0.05 for both structures). In patients, the right thalamus was significantly smaller, and the left thalamus rendered to be smaller compared to healthy controls. Age at onset showed a significant relation with left caudate, and a near-significant trend with right thalamus volumes. In conclusion, our findings suggest that patients with CD have significantly smaller mean volumes of the left and right basal ganglia and smaller right thalamus, with a trend toward to smaller left thalamus compared to healthy controls and that these findings provide novel constraints for a modern psychobiological theory of hysteria.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2006.01.011DOI Listing

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