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A pilot study of adolescents with psychotic experiences: potential cerebellar circuitry disruption early along the psychosis spectrum

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posted on 2024-10-07, 16:17 authored by Caoimhe Gaughan, Anurag Nasa, Elena Roman, Dearbhla Cullinane, Linda Kelly, Sahar RiazSahar Riaz, Conan Brady, Ciaran Browne, Vitallia Sooknarine, Olivia Mosley, Ahmad Almulla, Assael Alsehli, Allison Kelliher, Cian Murphy, Erik O'Hanlon, Mary CannonMary Cannon, Darren RoddyDarren Roddy

Aberrant connectivity in the cerebellum has been found in psychotic conditions such as schizophrenia corresponding with cognitive and motor deficits found in these conditions. Diffusion differences in the superior cerebellar peduncles, the white matter connecting the cerebellar circuitry to the rest of the brain, have also been found in schizophrenia and high-risk states. However, white matter diffusivity in the peduncles in individuals with sub-threshold psychotic experiences (PEs) but not reaching the threshold for a definitive diagnosis remains unstudied. This study investigates the cerebellar peduncles in adolescents with PEs but no formal psychiatric diagnosis.Sixteen adolescents with PEs and 17 age-matched controls recruited from schools underwent High-Angular-Resolution-Diffusion neuroimaging. Following constrained spherical deconvolution whole-brain tractography, the superior, inferior and middle peduncles were isolated and virtually dissected out using ExploreDTI. Differences for macroscopic and microscopic tract metrics were calculated using one-way between-group analyses of covariance controlling for age, sex and estimated Total Intracranial Volume (eTIV). Multiple comparisons were corrected using Bonferroni correction.A decrease in fractional anisotropy was identified in the right (p = 0.045) and left (p = 0.058) superior cerebellar peduncle; however, this did not survive strict Bonferroni multiple comparison correction. There were no differences in volumes or other diffusion metrics in either the middle or inferior peduncles.Our trend level changes in the superior cerebellar peduncle in a non-clinical sample exhibiting psychotic experiences complement similar but more profound changes previously found in ultra-high-risk individuals and those with psychotic disorders. This suggests that superior cerebellar peduncle circuitry perturbations may occur early along in the psychosis spectrum. 

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consortium

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council, 724,809 iHEAR

Health Research Board, HRA/PHS/2–012/28

History

Data Availability Statement

Data and materials are available by contacting the corresponding author

Comments

The original article is available at https://link.springer.com/

Published Citation

Gaughan C, et al. A pilot study of adolescents with psychotic experiences potential cerebellar circuitry disruption early along the psychosis spectrum. Cerebellum. 2023

Publication Date

23 June 2023

PubMed ID

37351730

Department/Unit

  • Psychiatry
  • Beaumont Hospital

Publisher

Springer Nature

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)