Decreased callosal thickness in Attention Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
Source: Biological Psychiatry
2009 Jan.;65:84-88.
Author: Luders E, Narr KL, Hamilton L, Phillips O, Thompson PM, Valle, J, Del?Homme M, Strickland T, Toga AW, McCracken J, Levitt J PubMed ID: 18842255
Abstract:
Background: Neuroimaging studies of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have revealed structural abnormalities in the brains
of affected individuals. One of the most replicated alterations is a significantly smaller corpus callosum (CC), for which conflicting reports
exist with respect to the affected callosal segments.
Methods: We applied novel surface-based geometrical modeling methods to establish the presence, direction, and exact location of
callosal alterations in ADHD at high spatial resolution. For this purpose, we calculated the thickness of the CC at 100 equidistant midsagittal
points in an age-matched male sample of 19 individuals with ADHD and 19 typically developing control subjects.
Results: In close agreement with many prior observations, the CC was shown to be significantly thinner in ADHD subjects in anterior and,
particularly, posterior callosal sections. Covarying for intelligence did not significantly alter the observed ADHD effects. However, group
differences were no longer present in anterior sections when covarying for brain volume and after excluding ADHD subjects comorbid for
oppositional defiant disorder.
Conclusions: Decreased callosal thickness may be associated with fewer fibers or a decrease in the myelination of fibers connecting the
parietal and prefrontal cortices. This might affect interhemispheric communication channels that are necessary to sustain attention or motor ontrol, thus contributing to symptoms of hyperactivity and impulsivity, or inattention, observed in ADHD. Future studies are necessary to etermine whether callosal abnormalities reflect maturational delays or persist into adulthood.