Mapping cerebellar subregional volumes and heterogeneity in schizophrenia spectrum disorders and violence
Thomas Fischer-Vieler, Jaroslav Rokicki, Milin Kim, Esten Leonardsen, Thomas Wolfers, Christina Bell, Gabriela Hjell, Natalia Tesli, Nina Bang, Ingrid Melle, Ole A. Andreassen, Christine Friestad, Petter Andreas Ringen, Unn K. Haukvik

TL;DR
This study explores how cerebellar structure differences are linked to schizophrenia and violent behavior, finding distinct patterns in subregional volumes.
Contribution
The study introduces novel heterogeneity analyses to uncover cerebellar deviations in schizophrenia and violence.
Findings
SSD-V and SSD-NV showed decreased grey matter in posterior cerebellar hemispheres and vermal regions.
SSD-V had significant volume reductions in the right Crus I and Vermis IX.
NPV showed extreme deviations in posterior cerebellum and vermis in over 10% of cases.
Abstract
Cerebellar abnormalities have been linked to schizophrenia and aggressive behaviour. Subregional cerebellar morphology reflects structural organization and function and show great heterogeneity, which may be linked to shared or distinct underlying mechanisms of violence and psychosis but remain unexplored in these marginalized groups. Total and subregional cerebellar volumes were estimated from 3 T MRI scans from persons with schizophrenia spectrum disorders without (SSD-NV; n = 107) or with (SSD-V; n = 36) a history of severe violence, violent offenders without schizophrenia (NPV; n = 20), and 411 healthy controls. Group difference analyses by GLMs were complemented by novel heterogeneity analyses using pre-trained models and norm-charts of lifespan cerebellar volumes to assess individual deviation patterns. We found decreased grey matter volumes in the posterior cerebellar hemispheres…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSchizophrenia research and treatment · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
