Browsing by Subject "Mean diffusivity"
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Item Open Access Influence of cigarette smoking on white matter in patients with clinically isolated syndrome as detected by diffusion tensor imaging(Turkish Society of Radiology, 2016) Durhan, G.; Diker, S.; Has, A. C.; Karakaya, J.; Kurne, A. T.; Oguz, K. K.PURPOSE Cigarette smoking has been associated with increased occurrence of multiple sclerosis (MS), as well as clinical disability and disease progression in MS. We aimed to assess the effects of smoking on the white matter (WM) in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) using diffusion tensor imaging. METHODS Smoker patients with CIS (n=16), smoker healthy controls (n=13), nonsmoker patients with CIS (n=17) and nonsmoker healthy controls (n=14) were included. Thirteen regions-of-interest including nonenhancing T1 hypointense lesion and perilesional WM, and 11 normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) regions were drawn on color-coded fractional anisotropy (FA) maps. Lesion load was determined in terms of number and volume of WM hyperintensities. RESULTS A tendency towards greater lesion load was found in smoker patients. T1 hypointense lesions and perilesional WM had reduced FA and increased mean diffusivity to a similar degree in smoker and nonsmoker CIS patients. Compared with healthy smokers, smoker CIS patients had more extensive NAWM changes shown by increased mean diffusivity. There was no relationship between diffusion metrics and clinical disability scores, duration of the disease and degree of smoking exposure. CONCLUSION Smoker patients showed a tendency towards having greater number of WM lesions and displayed significantly more extensive NAWM abnormalities. © Turkish Society of Radiology 2016.Item Open Access Schizophrenia polygenic risk score influence on white matter microstructure(Elsevier, 2020) Simões, B.; Vassos, E.; Shergill, S.; McDonald, C.; Toulopoulou, Timothea; Kalidindi, S.; Kane, F.; Murray, R.; Bramon, E.; Ferreira, H.; Prata, D.Schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar disorder (BD) are highly heritable, share symptomatology, and have a polygenic architecture. The impact of recent polygenic risk scores (PRS) for psychosis, which combine multiple genome-wide associated risk variations, should be assessed on heritable brain phenotypes also previously associated with the illnesses, for a better understanding of the pathways to disease. We have recently reported on the current SZ PRS's ability to predict 1st episode of psychosis case-control status and general cognition. Herein, we test its penetrance on white matter microstructure, which is known to be impaired in SZ, in BD and their relatives, using 141 participants (including SZ, BP, relatives of SZ or BP patients, and healthy volunteers), and two white matter integrity indexes: fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD). No significant correlation between the SZ PRS and FA or MD was found, thus it remains unclear whether white matter changes are primarily associated with SZ genetic risk profiles.