Minicolumnar abnormalities in autism
Autor: | Janet Stone, Christoph Schmitz, Herman van Engeland, Andrew E. Switala, Imke A. J. van Kooten, Manuel F. Casanova, Helmut Heinsen, Patrick R. Hof, Harry W.M. Steinbusch, Juan Trippe |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Sound localization
Adult Male Tissue Fixation Adolescent Cell Count Neocortex Biology Somatosensory system Pathology and Forensic Medicine Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Interneurons Cell density medicine Neuropil Image Processing Computer-Assisted Humans Autistic Disorder Child Cell Size Pyramidal Cells Motor Cortex Brain Anatomy Somatosensory Cortex medicine.disease Cross section (geometry) medicine.anatomical_structure Child Preschool Autism Female Neurology (clinical) Algorithms Cell Nucleolus Motor cortex |
Zdroj: | Acta neuropathologica. 112(3) |
ISSN: | 0001-6322 |
Popis: | Autism is characterized by qualitative abnormalities in behavior and higher order cognitive functions. Minicolumnar irregularities observed in autism provide a neurologically sound localization to observed clinical and anatomical abnormalities. This study corroborates the initial reports of a minicolumnopathy in autism within an independent sample. The patient population consisted of six age-matched pairs of patients (DSM-IV-TR and ADI-R diagnosed) and controls. Digital micrographs were taken from cortical areas S1, 4, 9, and 17. The image analysis produced estimates of minicolumnar width (CW), mean interneuronal distance, variability in CW (V (CW)), cross section of Nissl-stained somata, boundary length of stained somata per unit area, and the planar convexity. On average CW was 27.2 microm in controls and 25.7 microm in autistic patients (P = 0.0234). Mean neuron and nucleolar cross sections were found to be smaller in autistic cases compared to controls, while neuron density in autism exceeded the comparison group by 23%. Analysis of inter- and intracluster distances of a Delaunay triangulation suggests that the increased cell density is the result of a greater number of minicolumns, otherwise the number of cells per minicolumns appears normal. A reduction in both somatic and nucleolar cross sections could reflect a bias towards shorter connecting fibers, which favors local computation at the expense of inter-areal and callosal connectivity. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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