Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jan 2024)

Assessing cortical features in early stage ASD children

  • Antonio Napolitano,
  • Silvia Guerrera,
  • Martina Lucignani,
  • Chiara Parrillo,
  • Giulia Baldassari,
  • Francesca Bottino,
  • Giulia Moltoni,
  • Giulia Moltoni,
  • Maria Camilla Rossi Espagnet,
  • Lorenzo Figà Talamanca,
  • Giovanni Valeri,
  • Stefano Vicari,
  • Stefano Vicari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1098265
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is defined as a neurodevelopmental disorder largely investigated in the neurologic field. Recently, neuroimaging studies have been conducted in order to investigate cerebral morphologic alterations in ASD patients, demonstrating an atypical brain development before the clinical manifestations of the disorder. Cortical Thickness (CT) and Local Gyrification Index (LGI) distribution for ASD children were investigated in this study, with the aim to evaluate possible relationship between brain measures and individual characteristics (i.e., IQ and verbal ability). 3D T1-w sequences from 129 ASD and 58 age-matched Healthy Controls (HC) were acquired and processed in order to assess CT and LGI for each subject. Intergroup differences between ASD and HC were investigated, including analyses of 2 ASD subgroups, split according to patient verbal ability and IQ. When compared to HC, ASD showed increased CT and LGI within several brain areas, both as an overall group and as verbal ability an IQ subgroups. Moreover, when comparing language characteristics of the ASD subjects, those patients with verbal ability exhibit significant CT and LGI increase was found within the occipital lobe of right hemisphere. No significant results occurred when comparing ASD patients according to their IQ value. These results support the hypothesis of abnormal brain maturation in ASD since early childhood with differences among clinical subgroups suggesting different anatomical substrates underlying an aberrant connectivity.

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