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. 2017 Oct;51(10):1041-1051.
doi: 10.1177/0004867417715914. Epub 2017 Jul 1.

Ventricular volumes across stages of schizophrenia and other psychoses

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Ventricular volumes across stages of schizophrenia and other psychoses

Gregor E Berger et al. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2017 Oct.

Abstract

Objective: Ventricular enlargement is common in established schizophrenia; however, data from ultra high-risk for psychosis and first-episode psychosis studies are inconclusive. This study aims to investigate ventricular volumes at different stages of psychosis.

Methods: Ventricular volumes were measured using a semi-automated and highly reliable method, for 89 established schizophrenia, 162 first-episode psychosis, 135 ultra high-risk for psychosis and 87 healthy controls using 1.5T magnetic resonance images. Clinical outcome diagnoses for ultra high-risk for psychosis were evaluated at long-term follow-up (mean: 7.5 years).

Results: Compared to controls, we identified significant ventricular enlargement of 36.2% in established schizophrenia ( p < 0.001). Ventricular enlargement was not significant in first-episode psychosis (6%) or ultra high-risk for psychosis (-3%). Examination across stages of schizophrenia-spectrum diagnoses subgroups revealed a significant linear trend ( p = 0.006; established schizophrenia = 36.2%, first-episode psychosis schizophrenia = 18.5%, first-episode psychosis schizophreniform = -4.2% and ultra high-risk for psychosis-schizophrenia converters = -18.5%).

Conclusion: Ventricular enlargement is apparent in patients with established schizophrenia but is not a feature at the earliest stages of illness (ultra high-risk for psychosis and first-episode psychosis). Further research is needed to fully characterize the nature and timing of ventricular volume changes early in the course of illness and how these changes impact outcomes.

Keywords: Ventricle; diagnosis; first-episode psychosis; neuroimaging; ultra high-risk.

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