Abstract

Background: Previous first-episode schizophrenia (FES) studies have reported abnormalities in the volume and mid-sagittal size of the corpus callosum (CC), but findings have been inconsistent. Besides, the CC shape has rarely been analyzed in FES. Therefore, in this study, we investigated FES-related CC shape abnormalities using 198 participants [92 FES patients and 106 healthy controls (HCs)].Methods: We conducted statistical shape analysis of the mid-sagittal CC curve in a large deformation diffeomorphic metric mapping framework. The CC was divided into the genu, body, and splenium (gCC, bCC, and sCC) to target the key CC sub-regions affected by the FES pathology. Gender effects have been investigated.Results: There were significant area differences between FES and HC in the entire CC and gCC but not in bCC nor sCC. In terms of the localized shape morphometrics, significant region-specific shape inward-deformations were detected in the superior portion of gCC and the anterosuperior portion of bCC in FES. These global area and local shape morphometric abnormalities were restricted to female FES but not male FES.Conclusions: gCC was significantly affected in the neuropathology of FES and this finding was specific to female FES. This study suggests that gCC may be a key sub-region that is vulnerable to the neuropathology of FES, specifically in female patients. The morphometrics of gCC may serve as novel and efficient biomarkers for screening female FES patients.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder that in general presents with paranoid delusions and auditory hallucinations [1]

  • Significant gender-vs.-group interaction effect was detected in analyzing the entire corpus callosum (CC) area (P = 0.0106), the gCC area (P = 0.0072) and the sCC area (P = 0.0286)

  • There was significant group difference between First-episode schizophrenia (FES) and healthy controls (HCs) in the entire CC area (P = 0.0266, d = 0.2941) and that difference was exclusively concentrated on the gCC sub-region (P = 0.0005, d = 0.4962)

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder that in general presents with paranoid delusions and auditory hallucinations [1]. The social disability and cost induced by schizophrenia are very large [2, 3]. A large number of neuroimaging studies on structural brain abnormalities in FES focused on the gray matter, including the hippocampus, the entorhinal cortex, and the insular cortex [9,10,11,12,13,14,15]. The research on corpus callosum (CC) in FES is comparatively rare, especially morphological analyses of CC [19,20,21,22,23]. Previous first-episode schizophrenia (FES) studies have reported abnormalities in the volume and mid-sagittal size of the corpus callosum (CC), but findings have been inconsistent. The CC shape has rarely been analyzed in FES. In this study, we investigated FES-related CC shape abnormalities using 198 participants [92 FES patients and 106 healthy controls (HCs)]

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