NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2022)

Association between gray/white matter contrast and white matter microstructural alterations in medication-naïve obsessive–compulsive disorder

  • Qihui Niu,
  • Jianyu Li,
  • Lei Yang,
  • Zitong Huang,
  • Mingmin Niu,
  • Xueqin Song,
  • Yuanchao Zhang,
  • Youhui Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35
p. 103122

Abstract

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Intracortical myelin is involved in speeding and synchronizing neural activity of the cerebral cortex and has been found to be disrupted in various psychiatric disorders. However, its role in obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) has remained unknown. In this study, we investigated the alterations in intracortical myelin and their association with white matter (WM) microstructural abnormalities in OCD. T1-weighted and diffusion-weighted brain images were obtained for 51 medication-naïve patients with OCD and 26 healthy controls (HCs). The grey/white matter contrast (GWC) was calculated from T1-weighted signal intensities to characterize the intracortical myelin profile in OCD. Diffusion parameters, including fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), axial diffusivity (AD) and radial diffusivity (RD), were extracted from diffusion-weighted images to examine the WM microstructure in OCD. Compared with HCs, patients with OCD showed increased GWC in the bilateral orbitofrontal, cuneus, lingual and fusiform gyrus, left anterior cingulate, left superior parietal, right inferior parietal, and right middle frontal cortices, suggesting reduced intracortical myelin. Patients with OCD also showed decreased FA in several WM regions, with a topology corresponding to the GWC alterations. In both groups, the mean GWC of the significant clusters in between-group GWC analysis was correlated negatively with the mean FA of the significant clusters in between-group FA analysis. In patients with OCD, the FA of a cluster in the right cerebellum correlated negatively with the Yale-Brown obsessive–compulsive scale scores. Our results suggest that abnormal intracortical and WM myelination could be the microstructural basis for the brain connectivity alterations and disrupted inhibitory control in OCD.

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