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A quantitative MRI study of the corpus callosum in children and adolescents
Giedd JN; Rumsey JM; Castellanos FX; Rajapakse JC; Kaysen D; Vaituzis AC; Vauss YC; Hamburger SD; Rapoport JL
Total midsagittal area and seven subdivisions of the corpus callosum were measured on magnetic resonance images of 114 healthy boys and girls, aged 4 to 18. Striking variability of size was noted for all measures. Total midsagittal corpus callosum area increased in a robust and linear fashion from ages 4 to 18 (slope = 13.1 mm2/year, P = 0.0001 and slope = 11.1 mm2/year, P = 0.0001 for females and males, respectively). Posterior and mid regions demonstrated greater age-related changes than anterior regions with the rostrum and genu (anterior regions) having reached adult sizes in the youngest of our subjects. There were no significant effects of sex for any measures. These findings support anatomical studies indicating ongoing myelination of higher association areas throughout adolescence, but raise intriguing questions about anterior-posterior gradients of interhemispheric myelination
PMID: 8852379
ISSN: 0165-3806
CID: 27642
Cerebrospinal fluid homovanillic acid predicts behavioral response to stimulants in 45 boys with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Castellanos FX; Elia J; Kruesi MJ; Marsh WL; Gulotta CS; Potter WZ; Ritchie GF; Hamburger SD; Rapoport JL
Central dopaminergic activity has been assumed to play a role in the efficacy of stimulant drugs in attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), although supporting evidence has been scant. This study examined baseline cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of boys with ADHD in relation to response to three different stimulant drugs. Forty five boys with DSM-III-R-diagnosed ADHD had a lumbar puncture before double-blind trials of methylphenidate, dextroamphetamine, and placebo. Sixteen also received pemoline as part of a subsequent open trial. Stepwise linear regressions determined significant predictors of drug response. Our prior report of a positive significant correlation between CSF homovanillic acid (HVA) and ratings of hyperactivity on placebo was replicated in a new sample of 20 boys. After baseline symptom severity, CSF HVA was the best predictor of stimulant drug response, with significant independent contribution to four of the ten measures of hyperactivity that changed significantly with medication. Higher HVA predicted better drug response, and lower HVA was associated with worsening on some measures. This supports the mediating role of central dopaminergic activity in stimulant drug efficacy in childhood hyperactivity
PMID: 8822535
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 27643
Sensorimotor gating in boys with Tourette's syndrome and ADHD: preliminary results
Castellanos FX; Fine EJ; Kaysen D; Marsh WL; Rapoport JL; Hallett M
Deficits in sensorimotor gating, defined by prepulse inhibition (PPI), have been associated with subcortical dopaminergic overactivity in animal and clinical studies. Utilizing supraorbital nerve electrical stimulation, we produced adequate blink responses and measured decreases in amplitude resulting from electric prestimuli just above sensory threshold. Seven boys comorbid for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and a tic disorder had significantly reduced PPI, compared to 14 screened controls and seven boys with ADHD alone. If independently replicated, these results may reflect greater neurologic immaturity in these comorbid subjects. Alternatively, these findings, together with other converging lines of evidence, suggest that deficient pallidal inhibition may be etiologically related to tic and movement disorders
PMID: 8719124
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 27644
Ethical issues in biological psychiatric research with children and adolescents
Arnold LE; Stoff DM; Cook E Jr; Cohen DJ; Kruesi M; Wright C; Hattab J; Graham P; Zametkin A; Castellanos FX; et al.
OBJECTIVE: This article reviews, discusses, and elaborates considerations and recommendations summarized by the biological research working group at the May 1993 NIMH conference on ethical issues in mental health research on children and adolescents. METHOD: Notes from the conference were summarized and supplemented by a computer search of relevant literature. Drafts were circulated for comment to national and international experts, some of whom joined as coauthors. RESULTS: Issues addressed include possible overprotection by policy makers and institutional review boards arising out of the recognition of children's special vulnerability without equal recognition of their need for research; the definition of minimal risk, which has often been equated with no risk in the case of children; assessment of the risk-benefit ratio; procedures for minimization of risk, such as improved technology, 'piggybacking' onto clinical tests, and age-appropriate preparation; the difficulty of justifying risk for normal controls; age-graded consent; special considerations about neuroimaging; 'coercive' inducement, both material and psychological; disposition of unexpected or unwanted knowledge about individuals, including the subject's right not to know and parent's right not to tell; and socioeconomic status and cultural/ethnic equity. CONCLUSIONS: The working group adopted a position of advocacy for children's right to research access while recognizing that this advocacy must be tempered by thoughtful protections for child and adolescent subjects
PMID: 7649964
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 27645
Quantitative morphology of the caudate nucleus in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Castellanos FX; Giedd JN; Eckburg P; Marsh WL; Vaituzis AC; Kaysen D; Hamburger SD; Rapoport JL
OBJECTIVE: Because the caudate nuclei receive inputs from cortical regions implicated in executive functioning and attentional tasks, caudate and total brain volumes were examined in boys with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and normal comparison subjects. To gain developmental perspective, a wide age range was sampled for both groups. METHOD: The brains of 50 male ADHD patients (aged 6-19) and 48 matched comparison subjects were scanned by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Volumetric measures of the head and body of the caudate nucleus were obtained from T1-weighted coronal images. Interrater reliabilities (intraclass correlations) were 0.89 or greater. RESULTS: The normal pattern of slight but significantly greater right caudate volume across all ages was not seen in ADHD. Mean right caudate volume was slightly but significantly smaller in the ADHD patients than in the comparison subjects, while there was no significant difference for the left. Together these facts accounted for the highly significant lack of normal asymmetry in caudate volume in the ADHD boys. Total brain volume was 5% smaller in the ADHD boys, and this was not accounted for by age, height, weight, or IQ. Smaller brain volume in ADHD did not account for the caudate volume or symmetry differences. For the normal boys, caudate volume decreased substantially (13%) and significantly with age, while in ADHD there was no age-related change. CONCLUSIONS: Along with previous MRI findings of low volumes in corpus callosum regions, these results support developmental abnormalities of frontal-striatal circuits in ADHD
PMID: 7977887
ISSN: 0002-953x
CID: 27646
Cerebrospinal fluid monoamine metabolites in boys with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
Castellanos FX; Elia J; Kruesi MJ; Gulotta CS; Mefford IN; Potter WZ; Ritchie GF; Rapoport JL
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), plasma, and urinary monoamine metabolites were determined for 29 boys, aged 6-12, with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Levels of CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), homovanillic acid (HVA), and 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG), the metabolites of serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, respectively, correlated significantly with behavioral measures of aggression and impulsivity/hyperactivity. However, these correlations were in the unexpected direction; for example, CSF 5-HIAA correlated positively with the Brown-Goodwin Lifetime History of Aggression Scale. HVA in CSF was positively correlated with several measures of hyperactivity. The replicability of these findings, as well as possible socioenvironmental effects, and the predictive value of CSF monoamines in prepubertal hyperactivity are the subjects of ongoing study
PMID: 7527565
ISSN: 0165-1781
CID: 27647
Quantitative morphology of the corpus callosum in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Giedd JN; Castellanos FX; Casey BJ; Kozuch P; King AC; Hamburger SD; Rapoport JL
OBJECTIVE: By means of quantitative neuroanatomic imaging the authors assessed the hypothesis that there are structural brain abnormalities relevant to frontal lobe circuitry in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). METHOD: The midsagittal cross-sectional area of the corpus callosum, divided into seven sections, was measured from magnetic resonance images of 18 boys with ADHD and 18 carefully matched normal boys. RESULTS: Two anterior regions, the rostrum and the rostral body, were found to have significantly smaller areas in the ADHD group. These areas correlated in the expected direction with teacher and parent ratings of hyperactivity/impulsivity. CONCLUSIONS: This finding supports theories of abnormal frontal lobe development and function in ADHD
PMID: 8166306
ISSN: 0002-953x
CID: 27648
Tc-99m labeled triethelene tetraamine polysterene resin gastric emptying studies in bulimia patients
Shih WJ; Humphries L; Digenis GA; Castellanos FX; Domstad PA; DeLand FH
To evaluate gastric emptying in patients with bulimia, 20 patients (all women, ranging in age from 12 to 49 years) with upper gastrointestinal symptoms ingested 150-200 microCi 99mTc-triethelene tetraamine polysterene resin in cereal and had scintigraphy in the supine position. Data were accumulated at 5 min intervals to determine the gastric emptying time (GET). The results showed that the gastric emptying time was prolonged in 12 patients and decreased in 8. All 12 patients with prolonged emptying time were given 10 mg metoclopramide intravenously; 9 of these had a good response and 3 had no response. Although all patients had subjective symptoms of gastric dysfunction, the results indicate that about 60% had delayed and 40% had rapid gastric emptying. The findings of two extremes of gastric emptying time remain to be explained, however, this enables (a) objective documentation of gastric emptying as this technique (b) can separate those patients with rapid GET from those with prolonged GET, who might benefit from metoclopramide
PMID: 3622566
ISSN: 0340-6997
CID: 27649
Speech-production measures of speech perception: rapid shadowing of VCV syllables
Porter RJ Jr; Castellanos FX
Five listeners rapidly repeated ('shadowed') a random presentation of the vowel-consonant vowels (VCV's)/aba, apa, ama, aka, aga/. Initial vowel duration was varied to eliminate it as a temporal cue to the occurrence of the consonant. These shadowing, choice reaction times (RT's) were compared to simple RT's obtained when listeners always produced /aba/ or /ba/ to the same syllables. Both /aba/ and shadowing reactions were extremely fast (170 to 240 ms). Latency differences between the two tasks were attributable to differences in the point at which cues sufficient for responding were present. These results suggest that speech-perception decisions in shadowing are directly available to, and are perhaps made to occur at a point comparable to the consonantal release seen for the simple /aba/ responses. This result suggests that the motor organization required for a /ba/ response includes an implicit time interval appropriate for a consonantal closure
PMID: 7372922
ISSN: 0001-4966
CID: 27650
Naloxone-induced suppression of food intake in normal and hypothalamic obese rats
King BM; Castellanos FX; Kastin AJ; Berzas MC; Mauk MD; Olson GA; Olson RD
Intraperitoneal injections of naloxone hydrochloride (1, 2, 4, and 8 mg/kg) suppressed food intake in both normal and hypothalamic obese rats maintained on a 4-hr per day feeding schedule. The decrease in feeding was more pronounced in the animals with ventromedial hypothalamic lesions. Appetitively motivated feeding, i.e., the consumption of sweetened milk under nondeprived conditions, was also suppressed by naloxone, but there was no reliable difference between groups. It is concluded that opiate receptors located in the ventromedial hypothalamus are not essential for the effects of opiate agonists and antagonists on feeding behavior
PMID: 538063
ISSN: 0091-3057
CID: 27651