Brain anatomy, gender and IQ in children and adolescents with fragile X syndrome.

Autor: Eliez S; Stanford Behavioral Neurogenetic Research Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA 94305-5719, USA. eliez@stanford.edu, Blasey CM, Freund LS, Hastie T, Reiss AL
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Brain : a journal of neurology [Brain] 2001 Aug; Vol. 124 (Pt 8), pp. 1610-8.
DOI: 10.1093/brain/124.8.1610
Abstrakt: This study utilized MRI data to describe neuroanatomical morphology in children and adolescents with fragile X syndrome, the most common inherited cause of developmental disability. The syndrome provides a model for understanding how specific genetic factors can influence both neuroanatomy and cognitive capacity. Thirty-seven children and adolescents with fragile X syndrome received an MRI scan and cognitive testing. Scanning procedures and analytical strategies were identical to those reported in an earlier study of 85 typically developing children, permitting a comparison with a previously published template of normal brain development. Regression analyses indicated that there was a normative age-related decrease in grey matter and an increase in white matter. However, caudate and ventricular CSF volumes were significantly enlarged, and caudate volumes decreased with age. Rates of reduction of cortical grey matter were different for males and females. IQ scores were not significantly correlated with volumes of cortical and subcortical grey matter, and these relationships were statistically different from the correlational patterns observed in typically developing children. Children with fragile X syndrome exhibited several typical neurodevelopmental patterns. Aberrations in volumes of subcortical nuclei, gender differences in rates of cortical grey matter reduction and an absence of correlation between grey matter and cognitive performance provided indices of the deleterious effects of the fragile X mutation on the brain's structural organization.
Databáze: MEDLINE