Abstract

Regions with a likely involvement in schizophrenia may differ between patients with first-episodes of psychosis respectively with and without evolution into schizophrenia following the initial episode. We have used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess the volumes of dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPF) and superior temporal gyrus (STG) in a group of 37 first-episode psychotic patients. After an initial MRI study performed by the time of the first episode, the subjects were followed for two years. After this period 22 cases were diagnosed with schizophrenia, while the other 15 did not show clinical evidence for this illness. A Talairach-based tool was used for segmentation and volumetry of the MRI scans. A group of 44 healthy controls was used for comparison and, using lineal regression, to control for the normal effects of age and intracranial volume on the regional parameters of the patients. By the time of their first episode, patients with schizophrenia had significantly less grey matter in the right DLPF and STG regions as compared to both controls and FE without schizophrenia. Nevertheless, these parameters could not predict final diagnosis in a discriminant analysis model. Our findings indicate that subtle structural defects are already found by the time of the first psychotic break in schizophrenia, although clinical implications for these differences seem unclear.

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