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2020 journal original-research Neuroimage Clin

Cingulum-Callosal white-matter microstructure associated with emotional dysregulation in children: A diffusion tensor imaging study

Hung Y, Uchida M, Gaillard SL, Woodworth H, Kelberman C, Capella J, Kadlec K, Goncalves M, Ghosh S, Yendiki A, Chai XJ, Hirshfeld-Becker DR, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JDE, Biederman J

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102266
PubMed
32408198
PMC
PMC7218214
Cited by
32

Key findings

Whole-brain voxel-wise diffusion-tensor regression in 32 children found that greater emotional-dysregulation severity (Child Behaviour Checklist profile) was associated with higher radial diffusivity and lower fractional anisotropy in cingulum-callosal white-matter pathways — a candidate early neural marker of pediatric mood-disorder risk.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Emotional dysregulation symptoms in youth frequently predispose individuals to increased risk for mood disorders and other mental health difficulties. These symptoms are also known as a behavioral risk marker in predicting pediatric mood disorders. The underlying neural mechanism of emotional dysregulation, however, remains unclear. This study used the diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) technique to identify anatomically specific variation in white-matter microstructure that is associated with pediatric emotional dysregulation severity. Thirty-two children (mean age 9.53 years) with varying levels of emotional dysregulation symptoms were recruited by the Massachusetts General Hospital and underwent the DTI scans at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Emotional dysregulation severity was measured by the empirically-derived Child Behavior Checklist Emotional Dysregulation Profile that includes the Attention, Aggression, and Anxiety/Depression subscales. Whole-brain voxel-wise regression tests revealed significantly increased radial diffusivity (RD) and decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) in the cingulum-callosal regions linked to greater emotional dysregulation in the children. The results suggest that microstructural differences in cingulum-callosal white-matter pathways may manifest as a neurodevelopmental vulnerability for pediatric mood disorders as implicated in the clinical phenotype of pediatric emotional dysregulation. These findings may offer clinically and biologically relevant neural targets for early identification and prevention efforts for pediatric mood disorders.

Topics

  • child-development-education
  • connectomics-circuits

Lab authors

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