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Cerebrospinal fluid cytokines in pediatric neuropsychiatric disease

Mittleman BB; Castellanos FX; Jacobsen LK; Rapoport JL; Swedo SE; Shearer GM
This study examines cerebrospinal fluid from patients with three neuropsychiatric diseases of childhood for the presence and levels of several cytokines relevant to cell-mediated (type 1) and humoral (type 2) immunity. The patient groups include childhood-onset schizophrenia (n = 22), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) (n = 24), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (n = 42). The cytokines examined include IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-beta/LT, IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, and TNF-alpha. Patients with OCD had a preponderance of type 1 cytokines. IL-4 was detectable only in samples from patients with schizophrenia. IL-10 was rarely detected and never in patients with OCD. Few patients with schizophrenia had detectable amounts of IFN-gamma in CSFL. We conclude that there is a relative skewing of CSFL profiles toward type 1 cytokines in patients with OCD, whereas in schizophrenia the relative preponderance is toward type 2 mediators. Patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder exhibited profiles intermediate between OCD and schizophrenia. We infer that cell-mediated immunity may be involved in the etiopathogenesis of OCD, whereas a relative lack of cell-mediated immunity and involvement of humoral immunity may be present in schizophrenia. These data provide a rationale for immune-based strategies of study and therapeutics in childhood neuropsychiatric disease
PMID: 9300724
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 27633

Toward a pathophysiology of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Castellanos FX
Converging insights into attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) support the notion that ADHD is best characterized behaviorally as a disorder of self-regulation or executive functioning. Anatomic neuroimaging studies suggest that the relevant regulatory circuits include the prefrontal cortex and the basal ganglia, which are modulated by dopaminergic innervation from the midbrain and by stimulant medications. The emerging model proposed in this review encompasses a developmental perspective into this common condition
PMID: 9241475
ISSN: 0009-9228
CID: 27634

Controlled stimulant treatment of ADHD and comorbid Tourette's syndrome: effects of stimulant and dose

Castellanos FX; Giedd JN; Elia J; Marsh WL; Ritchie GF; Hamburger SD; Rapoport JL
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of methylphenidate (MPH) and dextroamphetamine (DEX) on tic severity in boys with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) comorbid with Tourette's syndrome. METHOD: A 9-week, placebo-controlled, double-blind crossover using a wide range of doses was completed by 20 subjects in three cohorts. RESULTS: Relatively high doses of MPH and DEX in the first cohort produced significant increases in tic severity which were sustained on higher doses of DEX but which attenuated on MPH. Overall, 14 of 20 subjects continued stimulant treatment for 1 to 3 years, generally in combination with other psychotropics. Stimulant-associated adverse effects, including tic exacerbations, were reversible in all cases. CONCLUSION: A substantial minority of comorbid subjects had consistent worsening of tics on stimulants, although the majority experienced improvement in ADHD symptoms with acceptable effects on tics. MPH was better tolerated than DEX
PMID: 9136492
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 27635

Variability of human brain structure size: ages 4-20 years

Lange N; Giedd JN; Castellanos FX; Vaituzis AC; Rapoport JL
Understanding variability of human brain structure sizes during development is important for the design and interpretation of pediatric neuroimaging studies. In this study we analyze the effects of hemisphere, sex and age on size variability of the total cerebrum, cerebellum, lateral ventricles, temporal lobe, amygdala, hippocampus, superior temporal gyrus, corpus callosum, caudate, putamen, and globus pallidus in 115 healthy children and adolescents, ages 4-20 years. Variability differed significantly across structures, with the lateral ventricles demonstrating the highest coefficient of variation and the putamen the lowest. Males varied significantly more than females in the left cerebrum and left superior temporal gyrus, whereas females varied more than males in the right caudate and right putamen. Age effects were seen in increased variability after puberty for the lateral ventricles, hippocampus and superior temporal gyrus. These variances are important determinants of minimum sample sizes required to detect group differences in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies
PMID: 10710158
ISSN: 0165-1781
CID: 27620

Implication of right frontostriatal circuitry in response inhibition and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Casey BJ; Castellanos FX; Giedd JN; Marsh WL; Hamburger SD; Schubert AB; Vauss YC; Vaituzis AC; Dickstein DP; Sarfatti SE; Rapoport JL
OBJECTIVE: To examine the relation between specific frontostriatal structures (prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia) and response inhibition deficits observed in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). METHOD: Children with ADHD and age-matched normal controls were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and tested on three response inhibition tasks. Behavioral performance was correlated with MRI-based anatomical measures of frontostriatal circuitry (prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia) implicated in ADHD. RESULTS: First, significant differences in performance by children with ADHD and normal volunteers were observed on all three response inhibition tasks. Second, performance on these tasks correlated only with those anatomical measures of frontostriatal circuitry observed to be abnormal in children with ADHD (e.g., the region of the prefrontal cortex, caudate, and globus pallidus, but not the putamen) in the authors' previous study. Third, significant correlations between task performance and anatomical measures of the prefrontal cortex and caudate nuclei were predominantly in the right hemisphere, supporting a role of right frontostriatal circuitry in response inhibition and ADHD. CONCLUSION: The data suggest a role of the right prefrontal cortex in suppressing responses to salient, but otherwise irrelevant events while the basal ganglia appear to be involved in executing these behavioral responses
PMID: 9055518
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 27636

Blink rate in childhood-onset schizophrenia: comparison with normal and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder controls

Jacobsen LK; Hommer DW; Hong WL; Castellanos FX; Frazier JA; Giedd JN; Rapoport JL
Several lines of evidence have implicated central dopaminergic pathways in the modulation of blink rate. In the present study, blink rate during smooth pursuit was examined in 17 children with childhood-onset schizophrenia, on and off of clozapine, and compared to that of age-matched normal children and unmedicated children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). As has been observed in adolescent and adult schizophrenics, blink rate was significantly higher in schizophrenic children relative to normal and ADHD controls. Within the schizophrenic group, blink rate did not significantly change with the introduction of clozapine and was not related to clinical variables. Blink rate was positively correlated with deterioration in smooth pursuit in normal subjects
PMID: 8959287
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 27637

Smooth pursuit eye movements in childhood-onset schizophrenia: comparison with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and normal controls

Jacobsen LK; Hong WL; Hommer DW; Hamburger SD; Castellanos FX; Frazier JA; Giedd JN; Gordon CT; Karp BI; McKenna K; Rapoport JL
Abnormalities of the smooth pursuit eye movements of adults with schizophrenia have been well described. We examined smooth pursuit eye movements in schizophrenic children, contrasting them with normal and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) subjects, to determine whether there is continuity of eye movement dysfunction between childhood- and adult-onset forms of schizophrenia. Seventeen schizophrenic children with onset of illness by age 12, 18 ADHD children, and 22 normal children were studied while engaged in a smooth pursuit eye tracking task. Eye tracking variables were compared across the three groups. Schizophrenic children exhibited significantly greater smooth pursuit impairments than either normal or ADHD subjects. Within the schizophrenic group, there were no significant relationships between eye tracking variables and clinical variables, or ventricular/brain ratio. Childhood-onset schizophrenia is associated with a similar pattern of smooth pursuit abnormalities to that seen in later-onset schizophrenia
PMID: 8931918
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 27639

Brain morphometry in Tourette's syndrome: the influence of comorbid attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Castellanos FX; Giedd JN; Hamburger SD; Marsh WL; Rapoport JL
Three separate groups, using MRI, have reported basal ganglia abnormalities in Tourette's syndrome (TS). We found similar abnormalities in boys with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Because TS and ADHD are frequently comorbid, we contrasted ADHD boys with and without TS along with control subjects. As expected, we found a significant loss of the normal globus pallidus asymmetry in the patients, but presence or absence of TS did not differentiate the ADHD groups. We conclude that accounting for ADHD comorbidity will be important in future TS morphometric studies
PMID: 8960751
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 27638

Quantitative brain magnetic resonance imaging in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder

Castellanos FX; Giedd JN; Marsh WL; Hamburger SD; Vaituzis AC; Dickstein DP; Sarfatti SE; Vauss YC; Snell JW; Lange N; Kaysen D; Krain AL; Ritchie GF; Rajapakse JC; Rapoport JL
BACKGROUND: Anatomic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have been limited by small samples or measurement of single brain regions. Since the neuropsychological deficits in ADHD implicate a network linking basal ganglia and frontal regions, 12 subcortical and cortical regions and their symmetries were measured to determine if these structures best distinguished ADHD. METHODS: Anatomic brain MRIs for 57 boys with ADHD and 55 healthy matched controls, aged 5 to 18 years, were obtained using a 1.5-T scanner with contiguous 2-mm sections. Volumetric measures of the cerebrum, caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus, amygdala, hippocampus, temporal lobe, cerebellum; a measure of prefrontal cortex; and related right-left asymmetries were examined along with midsagittal area measures of the cerebellum and corpus callosum. Interrater reliabilities were .82 or greater for all MRI measures. RESULTS: Subjects with ADHD had a 4.7% smaller total cerebral volume (P = .02). Analysis of covariance for total cerebral volume demonstrated a significant loss of normal right > left asymmetry in the caudate (P = .006), smaller right globus pallidus (P = .005), smaller right anterior frontal region (P = .02), smaller cerebellum (P = .05), and reversal of normal lateral ventricular asymmetry (P = .03) in the ADHD group. The normal age-related decrease in caudate volume was not seen, and increases in lateral ventricular volumes were significantly diminished in ADHD. CONCLUSION: This first comprehensive morphometric analysis is consistent with hypothesized dysfunction of right-sided prefrontal-striatal systems in ADHD
PMID: 8660127
ISSN: 0003-990x
CID: 27640

DSM-IV stereotypic movement disorder: persistence of stereotypies of infancy in intellectually normal adolescents and adults [Case Report]

Castellanos FX; Ritchie GF; Marsh WL; Rapoport JL
BACKGROUND: As part of a broader series of studies on unwanted repetitive behaviors, DSM-IV stereotypic movement disorder (SMD) was examined in an intellectually normal population. Repetitive nonfunctional behaviors, or stereotypies, are expressed during early normal development but have not been described in adults without severe psychiatric or intellectual impairment. METHOD: Lifetime and current psychiatric Axis I diagnoses were determined by structured and clinical interviews in subjects who responded to a newspaper advertisement that specifically mentioned rocking and head banging. RESULTS: Of 52 potential subjects who were screened by telephone, 32 had been previously diagnosed with an Axis I psychiatric disorder, which presumably accounted for the repetitive behavior, or were otherwise excluded. Of 20 who were interviewed in person, 12 met DSM-IV criteria for SMD; rocking or thumb sucking was present in 8 of these 12. Four of 8 rockers had a first-degree relative who had a lifetime history of a similar repetitive behavior. A lifetime history of an affective or anxiety disorder was found for 11 of 12 SMD subjects. CONCLUSION: DSM-IV stereotypic movement disorder can be diagnosed in intellectually normal individuals. Although sampling bias was probable, prominent stereotypies in individuals meeting the DSM-IV criteria for stereotypic movement disorder, which are narrower than the DSM-III-R criteria for stereotypy/habit disorder, seem likely to include rocking and thumb sucking. The likelihood of persistence of these behaviors, which are developmentally appropriate in infancy, may be enhanced by comorbidity with anxiety or affective disorders
PMID: 8617696
ISSN: 0160-6689
CID: 27641