Abstract

BackgroundGenetic, hormonal, and environmental factors contribute since infancy to sexual dimorphism in regional brain structures of subjects with typical development. However, the neuroanatomical differences between male and female children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are an intriguing and still poorly investigated issue. This study aims to evaluate whether the brain of young children with ASD exhibits sex-related structural differences and if a correlation exists between clinical ASD features and neuroanatomical underpinnings.MethodsA total of 152 structural MRI scans were analysed. Specifically, 76 young children with ASD (38 males and 38 females; 2–7 years of age; mean = 53 months, standard deviation = 17 months) were evaluated employing a support vector machine (SVM)-based analysis of the grey matter (GM). Group comparisons consisted of 76 age-, gender- and non-verbal-intelligence quotient-matched children with typical development or idiopathic developmental delay without autism.ResultsFor both genders combined, SVM showed a significantly increased GM volume in young children with ASD with respect to control subjects, predominantly in the bilateral superior frontal gyrus (Brodmann area –BA– 10), bilateral precuneus (BA 31), bilateral superior temporal gyrus (BA 20/22), whereas less GM in patients with ASD was found in right inferior temporal gyrus (BA 37). For the within gender comparisons (i.e., females with ASD vs. controls and males with ASD vs. controls), two overlapping regions in bilateral precuneus (BA 31) and left superior frontal gyrus (BA 9/10) were detected. Sex-by-group analyses revealed in males with ASD compared to matched controls two male-specific regions of increased GM volume (left middle occipital gyrus—BA 19—and right superior temporal gyrus—BA 22). Comparisons in females with and without ASD demonstrated increased GM volumes predominantly in the bilateral frontal regions. Additional regions of significantly increased GM volume in the right anterior cingulate cortex (BA 32) and right cerebellum were typical only of females with ASD.ConclusionsDespite the specific behavioural correlates of sex-dimorphism in ASD, brain morphology as yet remains unclear and requires future dedicated investigations. This study provides evidence of structural brain gender differences in young children with ASD that possibly contribute to the different phenotypic disease manifestations in males and females.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13229-015-0067-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Genetic, hormonal, and environmental factors contribute since infancy to sexual dimorphism in regional brain structures of subjects with typical development

  • No significant differences were detected between groups on p < 0.05 relative to age when the analysis of variance (ANOVA) test was applied on all the subgroups composing the dataset, obtaining F = 0.8, p = 0.59, with ν1 = 7 degrees of freedom for the between group variance, ν2 = 144 degrees of freedom for the within group variance

  • The absolute volumes of grey matter (GM), white matter (WM), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and total intracranial volume (TIV) for each subject of the data set, calculated from the segmented brain images generated during the image preprocessing were considered

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hormonal, and environmental factors contribute since infancy to sexual dimorphism in regional brain structures of subjects with typical development. One of the most evident distinctions between males and females with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) regards the well-documented male preponderance ranging from approximately 1.33:1 to 16.0:1, depending on sites, subtypes of ASD diagnosis and intelligence quotient (IQ) level [1] The etiopathogenesis of this gender bias remains a matter of thoughtful debate [2]; while some authors question the significance of male preponderance and ascribe it to a greater under-diagnosis or wrong diagnosis of females with ASD [3], others trace back the biased sex ratio to a genetic [4] and/or sex-related hormones pathogenesis [5]. A large investigation on 2418 probands with ASD concluded that females have a different cognitive and behavioural profile than males [20], characterized by a higher prevalence of intellectual disability that negatively impact the level of socio-communicative skills and adaptive function. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the impact of age and gender on the core autistic symptoms described no differences in symptom severity between toddler/preschooler males and females with ASD [23]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call