Cargando…

Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism

To examine brain volumes in substructures associated with the behavioral features of children with FXS compared to children with idiopathic autism and controls. A cross-sectional study of brain substructures was conducted at the first time-point as part of an ongoing longitudinal MRI study of brain...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hazlett, Heather Cody, Poe, Michele D., Lightbody, Amy A., Gerig, Guido, MacFall, James R., Ross, Allison K., Provenzale, James, Martin, Arianna, Reiss, Allan L., Piven, Joseph
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2917990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20700390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11689-009-9009-8
_version_ 1782185091609395200
author Hazlett, Heather Cody
Poe, Michele D.
Lightbody, Amy A.
Gerig, Guido
MacFall, James R.
Ross, Allison K.
Provenzale, James
Martin, Arianna
Reiss, Allan L.
Piven, Joseph
author_facet Hazlett, Heather Cody
Poe, Michele D.
Lightbody, Amy A.
Gerig, Guido
MacFall, James R.
Ross, Allison K.
Provenzale, James
Martin, Arianna
Reiss, Allan L.
Piven, Joseph
author_sort Hazlett, Heather Cody
collection PubMed
description To examine brain volumes in substructures associated with the behavioral features of children with FXS compared to children with idiopathic autism and controls. A cross-sectional study of brain substructures was conducted at the first time-point as part of an ongoing longitudinal MRI study of brain development in FXS. The study included 52 boys between 18–42 months of age with FXS and 118 comparison children (boys with autism-non FXS, developmental-delay, and typical development). Children with FXS and autistic disorder had substantially enlarged caudate volume and smaller amygdala volume; whereas those children with autistic disorder without FXS (i.e., idiopathic autism) had only modest enlargement in their caudate nucleus volumes but more robust enlargement of their amygdala volumes. Although we observed this double dissociation among selected brain volumes, no significant differences in severity of autistic behavior between these groups were observed. This study offers a unique examination of early brain development in two disorders, FXS and idiopathic autism, with overlapping behavioral features, but two distinct patterns of brain morphology. We observed that despite almost a third of our FXS sample meeting criteria for autism, the profile of brain volume differences for children with FXS and autism differed from those with idiopathic autism. These findings underscore the importance of addressing heterogeneity in studies of autistic behavior.
format Text
id pubmed-2917990
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher Springer US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29179902010-08-09 Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism Hazlett, Heather Cody Poe, Michele D. Lightbody, Amy A. Gerig, Guido MacFall, James R. Ross, Allison K. Provenzale, James Martin, Arianna Reiss, Allan L. Piven, Joseph J Neurodev Disord Article To examine brain volumes in substructures associated with the behavioral features of children with FXS compared to children with idiopathic autism and controls. A cross-sectional study of brain substructures was conducted at the first time-point as part of an ongoing longitudinal MRI study of brain development in FXS. The study included 52 boys between 18–42 months of age with FXS and 118 comparison children (boys with autism-non FXS, developmental-delay, and typical development). Children with FXS and autistic disorder had substantially enlarged caudate volume and smaller amygdala volume; whereas those children with autistic disorder without FXS (i.e., idiopathic autism) had only modest enlargement in their caudate nucleus volumes but more robust enlargement of their amygdala volumes. Although we observed this double dissociation among selected brain volumes, no significant differences in severity of autistic behavior between these groups were observed. This study offers a unique examination of early brain development in two disorders, FXS and idiopathic autism, with overlapping behavioral features, but two distinct patterns of brain morphology. We observed that despite almost a third of our FXS sample meeting criteria for autism, the profile of brain volume differences for children with FXS and autism differed from those with idiopathic autism. These findings underscore the importance of addressing heterogeneity in studies of autistic behavior. Springer US 2009-03-05 2009-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2917990/ /pubmed/20700390 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11689-009-9009-8 Text en © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2009
spellingShingle Article
Hazlett, Heather Cody
Poe, Michele D.
Lightbody, Amy A.
Gerig, Guido
MacFall, James R.
Ross, Allison K.
Provenzale, James
Martin, Arianna
Reiss, Allan L.
Piven, Joseph
Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title_full Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title_fullStr Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title_full_unstemmed Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title_short Teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: Same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile X syndrome and autism
title_sort teasing apart the heterogeneity of autism: same behavior, different brains in toddlers with fragile x syndrome and autism
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2917990/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20700390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11689-009-9009-8
work_keys_str_mv AT hazlettheathercody teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT poemicheled teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT lightbodyamya teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT gerigguido teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT macfalljamesr teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT rossallisonk teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT provenzalejames teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT martinarianna teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT reissallanl teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism
AT pivenjoseph teasingaparttheheterogeneityofautismsamebehaviordifferentbrainsintoddlerswithfragilexsyndromeandautism