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Structural brain network connectivity in trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder). | LitMetric

Structural brain network connectivity in trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder).

Brain Imaging Behav

SAMRC Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Neuroimaging research indicates that trichotillomania, an obsessive-compulsive related disorder, involves specific brain regions including frontal, striatal, limbic, and cerebellar areas, but the exact neural circuits remain poorly understood.
  • - A study used T1-weighted MRI scans and graph theoretical analysis to assess brain networks in 23 adult females with trichotillomania compared to 16 healthy controls, noting hubs of connectivity in areas like the temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes in affected individuals.
  • - The study found that the inferior temporal gyrus, important for object recognition, had significantly higher connectivity in trichotillomania patients, aligning with previous research

Article Abstract

Neuroimaging studies suggest involvement of frontal, striatal, limbic and cerebellar regions in trichotillomania, an obsessive-compulsive related disorder. However, findings regarding the underlying neural circuitry remains limited and inconsistent. Graph theoretical analysis offers a way to identify structural brain networks in trichotillomania. T1-weighted MRI scans were acquired in adult females with trichotillomania (n = 23) and healthy controls (n = 16). Graph theoretical analysis was used to investigate structural networks as derived from cortical thickness and volumetric FreeSurfer output. Hubs, brain regions with highest connectivity in the global network, were identified, and group differences were determined. Regions with highest connectivity on a regional level were also determined. There were no differences in small-worldness or other network measures between groups. Hubs in the global network of trichotillomania patients included temporal, parietal, and occipital regions (at 2SD above mean network connectivity), as well as frontal and striatal regions (at 1SD above mean network connectivity). In contrast, in healthy controls hubs at 2SD represented different frontal, parietal and temporal regions, while at 1SD hubs were widespread. The inferior temporal gyrus, involved in object recognition as part of the ventral visual pathway, had significantly higher connectivity on a global and regional level in trichotillomania. The study included women only and sample size was limited. This study adds to the trichotillomania literature on structural brain network connectivity. Our study findings are consistent with previous studies that have implicated somatosensory, sensorimotor and frontal-striatal circuitry in trichotillomania, and partially overlap with structural connectivity findings in obsessive-compulsive disorder.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10435646PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11682-023-00767-5DOI Listing

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