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Cortical thickness across the cingulate gyrus in schizophrenia and its association to illness duration and memory performance

Jan‐Willem Thielen, Bernhard Müller, Dae‐In Chang, Axel Krug, Stephanie Mehl, Alexander M. Rapp, Henrik Walter, Georg Winterer, Kai Vogeley, Stefan Klingberg, Michael Wagner, Tilo Kircher

2022European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Schizophrenia has been associated with structural brain abnormalities and cognitive deficits that partly change during the course of illness. In the present study, cortical thickness in five subregions of the cingulate gyrus was assessed in 44 patients with schizophrenia-spectrum disorder and 47 control persons and related to illness duration and memory capacities. In the patients group, cortical thickness was increased in the posterior part of the cingulate gyrus and related to illness duration whereas cortical thickness was decreased in anterior parts unrelated to illness duration. In contrast, cortical thickness was related to episodic and working memory performance only in the anterior but not posterior parts of the cingulate gyrus. Our finding of a posterior cingulate increase may point to either increased parietal communication that is accompanied by augmented neural plasticity or to effects of altered neurodegenerative processes in schizophrenia.

Topics & Concepts

Angular gyrusSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)GyrusPsychologyNeurosciencePosterior cingulateSuperior temporal gyrusAssociation (psychology)Episodic memoryCognitionAudiologyMedicinePsychiatryFunctional magnetic resonance imagingPsychotherapistFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and ApplicationsSchizophrenia research and treatment
Cortical thickness across the cingulate gyrus in schizophrenia and its association to illness duration and memory performance | Litcius