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Association of hospitalization with structural brain alterations in patients with affective disorders over nine years

Repeated hospitalizations are a characteristic of severe disease courses in patients with affective disorders (PAD). To elucidate how a hospitalization during a nine-year follow-up in PAD affects brain structure, a longitudinal case-control study (mean [SD] follow-up period 8.98 [2.20] years) was co...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Förster, Katharina, Grotegerd, Dominik, Dohm, Katharina, Lemke, Hannah, Enneking, Verena, Meinert, Susanne, Redlich, Ronny, Heindel, Walter, Bauer, Jochen, Kugel, Harald, Suslow, Thomas, Ohrmann, Patricia, Carballedo, Angela, O’Keane, Veronica, Fagan, Andrew, Doolin, Kelly, McCarthy, Hazel, Kanske, Philipp, Frodl, Thomas, Dannlowski, Udo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10195797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37202406
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41398-023-02452-z
Descripción
Sumario:Repeated hospitalizations are a characteristic of severe disease courses in patients with affective disorders (PAD). To elucidate how a hospitalization during a nine-year follow-up in PAD affects brain structure, a longitudinal case-control study (mean [SD] follow-up period 8.98 [2.20] years) was conducted using structural neuroimaging. We investigated PAD (N = 38) and healthy controls (N = 37) at two sites (University of Münster, Germany, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland). PAD were divided into two groups based on the experience of in-patient psychiatric treatment during follow-up. Since the Dublin-patients were outpatients at baseline, the re-hospitalization analysis was limited to the Münster site (N = 52). Voxel-based morphometry was employed to examine hippocampus, insula, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and whole-brain gray matter in two models: (1) group (patients/controls)×time (baseline/follow-up) interaction; (2) group (hospitalized patients/not-hospitalized patients/controls)×time interaction. Patients lost significantly more whole-brain gray matter volume of superior temporal gyrus and temporal pole compared to HC (p(FWE) = 0.008). Patients hospitalized during follow-up lost significantly more insular volume than healthy controls (p(FWE) = 0.025) and more volume in their hippocampus compared to not-hospitalized patients (p(FWE) = 0.023), while patients without re-hospitalization did not differ from controls. These effects of hospitalization remained stable in a smaller sample excluding patients with bipolar disorder. PAD show gray matter volume decline in temporo-limbic regions over nine years. A hospitalization during follow-up comes with intensified gray matter volume decline in the insula and hippocampus. Since hospitalizations are a correlate of severity, this finding corroborates and extends the hypothesis that a severe course of disease has detrimental long-term effects on temporo-limbic brain structure in PAD.