Trajectories of early brain volume development in fragile X syndrome and autism

HC Hazlett, MD Poe, AA Lightbody, M Styner…�- Journal of the American�…, 2012 - Elsevier
HC Hazlett, MD Poe, AA Lightbody, M Styner, JR MacFall, AL Reiss, J Piven
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2012Elsevier
OBJECTIVE: To examine patterns of early brain growth in young children with fragile X
syndrome (FXS) compared with a comparison group (controls) and a group with idiopathic
autism. METHOD: The study included 53 boys 18 to 42 months of age with FXS, 68 boys
with idiopathic autism (autism spectrum disorder), and a comparison group of 50 typically
developing and developmentally delayed controls. Structural brain volumes were examined
using magnetic resonance imaging across two time points, at 2 to 3 and again at 4 to 5 years�…
OBJECTIVE
To examine patterns of early brain growth in young children with fragile X syndrome (FXS) compared with a comparison group (controls) and a group with idiopathic autism.
METHOD
The study included 53 boys 18 to 42 months of age with FXS, 68 boys with idiopathic autism (autism spectrum disorder), and a comparison group of 50 typically developing and developmentally delayed controls. Structural brain volumes were examined using magnetic resonance imaging across two time points, at 2 to 3 and again at 4 to 5 years of age, and total brain volumes and regional (lobar) tissue volumes were examined. In addition, a selected group of subcortical structures implicated in the behavioral features of FXS (e.g., basal ganglia, hippocampus, amygdala) was studied.
RESULTS
Children with FXS had larger global brain volumes compared with controls but were not different than children with idiopathic autism, and the rate of brain growth from 2 to 5 years of age paralleled that seen in controls. In contrast to children with idiopathic autism who had generalized cortical lobe enlargement, children with FXS showed specific enlargement in the temporal lobe white matter, cerebellar gray matter, and caudate nucleus, but a significantly smaller amygdala.
CONCLUSIONS
This structural longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging study of preschoolers with FXS observed generalized brain overgrowth in children with FXS compared with controls, evident at age 2 and maintained across ages 4 to 5. In addition, different patterns of brain growth that distinguished boys with FXS from boys with idiopathic autism were found.
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