Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2020)

Higher Body-Mass Index and Lower Gray Matter Volumes in First Episode of Psychosis

  • Marián Kolenič,
  • Marián Kolenič,
  • Filip Španiel,
  • Jaroslav Hlinka,
  • Jaroslav Hlinka,
  • Martin Matějka,
  • Martin Matějka,
  • Pavel Knytl,
  • Pavel Knytl,
  • Antonín Šebela,
  • Jiří Renka,
  • Jiří Renka,
  • Tomas Hajek,
  • Tomas Hajek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.556759
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundNeurostructural alterations are often reported in first episode of psychosis (FEP), but there is heterogeneity in the direction and location of findings between individual studies. The reasons for this heterogeneity remain unknown. Obesity is disproportionately frequent already early in the course of psychosis and is associated with smaller brain volumes. Thus, we hypothesized that obesity may contribute to brain changes in FEP.MethodWe analyzed MRI scans from 120 participants with FEP and 114 healthy participants. In primary analyses, we performed voxel-based morphometry (VBM) with small volume corrections to regions associated with FEP or obesity in previous meta-analyses. In secondary analyses, we performed whole-brain VBM analyses.ResultsIn primary analyses, we found that when controlling for BMI, FEP had lower GM volume than healthy participants in a) left fronto-temporal region (pTFCE = 0.008) and b) left postcentral gyrus (pTFCE = 0.043). When controlling for FEP, BMI was associated with lower GM volume in left cerebellum (pTFCE < 0.001). In secondary analyses, we found that when controlling for BMI, FEP had lower GM volume than healthy participants in the a) cerebellum (pTFCE = 0.004), b) left frontal (pTFCE = 0.024), and c) right temporal cortex (pTFCE = 0.031). When controlling for FEP, BMI was associated with lower GM volume in cerebellum (pTFCE = 0.004). Levels of C-reactive protein, HDL and LDL-cholesterol correlated with obesity related neurostructural alterations.ConclusionsThis study suggests that higher BMI, which is frequent in FEP, may contribute to cerebellar alterations in schizophrenia. As previous studies showed that obesity-related brain alterations may be reversible, our findings raise the possibility that improving the screening for and treatment of obesity and associated metabolic changes could preserve brain structure in FEP.

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