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Abnormal asymmetry in frontostriatal white matter in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

journal contribution
posted on 2016-12-01, 00:00 authored by Tim SilkTim Silk, Veronika Vilgis, Chris Adamson, Jian Chen, Lisa Smit, Alasdair Vance, Mark A Bellgrove
A growing body of work utilizing structural and functional brain imaging and neurocognitive measures of executive and attentional function indicates anomalous asymmetry in ADHD. This study examined the white-matter volume and diffusion properties of frontostriatal tracts, as a function of hemisphere, in ADHD and healthy controls. Forty-three young males (21 ADHD-Combined Type and 22 controls) aged 10-18 years underwent structural and diffusion weighted MRI. Tractography applying constrained spherical deconvolution (CSD) was used to construct frontostriatal tracts between each of caudate and putamen and each of dorsolateral prefrontal, ventrolateral prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortices (DLPFC, VLPFC and OFC) in each hemisphere, to examine both volumetric and diffusion microstructure properties. Young people with ADHD did not show the right hemisphere lateralization of volume in the Caudate-VLPFC and Caudate-DLPFC tracts that was evident in controls, however the ADHD group displayed a pronounced lateralization to the left for fractional anisotropy in the Putamen-VLPFC tracts. The degree of volume asymmetry did not correlate with symptom severity; however fractional anisotropy (FA) values that were more strongly lateralized to the left in the Putamen-VLPFC white matter were associated with greater symptom severity. ADHD was associated with anomalous hemispheric asymmetries in both tract volume and underlying white-matter microstructure in major fibre tracts of the frontostriatal system. Our observations of both weaker lateralization to the right in terms of tract volume and stronger lateralization to the left in terms of FA values for the ADHD group, suggests that previous inconsistencies in the literature may reflect the influence of such asymmetries.

History

Journal

Brain imaging and behavior

Volume

10

Issue

4

Pagination

1080 - 1089

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1931-7557

eISSN

1931-7565

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York