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. 2018 Mar 15;83(6):509-517.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.09.022. Epub 2017 Sep 28.

Prefrontal-Thalamic Anatomical Connectivity and Executive Cognitive Function in Schizophrenia

Affiliations

Prefrontal-Thalamic Anatomical Connectivity and Executive Cognitive Function in Schizophrenia

Monica Giraldo-Chica et al. Biol Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Background: Executive cognitive functions, including working memory, cognitive flexibility, and inhibition, are impaired in schizophrenia. Executive functions rely on coordinated information processing between the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and thalamus, particularly the mediodorsal nucleus. This raises the possibility that anatomical connectivity between the PFC and mediodorsal thalamus may be 1) reduced in schizophrenia and 2) related to deficits in executive function. The current investigation tested these hypotheses.

Methods: Forty-five healthy subjects and 62 patients with a schizophrenia spectrum disorder completed a battery of tests of executive function and underwent diffusion-weighted imaging. Probabilistic tractography was used to quantify anatomical connectivity between six cortical regions, including PFC, and the thalamus. Thalamocortical anatomical connectivity was compared between healthy subjects and patients with schizophrenia using region-of-interest and voxelwise approaches, and the association between PFC-thalamic anatomical connectivity and severity of executive function impairment was examined in patients.

Results: Anatomical connectivity between the thalamus and PFC was reduced in schizophrenia. Voxelwise analysis localized the reduction to areas of the mediodorsal thalamus connected to lateral PFC. Reduced PFC-thalamic connectivity in schizophrenia correlated with impaired working memory but not cognitive flexibility and inhibition. In contrast to reduced PFC-thalamic connectivity, thalamic connectivity with somatosensory and occipital cortices was increased in schizophrenia.

Conclusions: The results are consistent with models implicating disrupted PFC-thalamic connectivity in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and mechanisms of cognitive impairment. PFC-thalamic anatomical connectivity may be an important target for procognitive interventions. Further work is needed to determine the implications of increased thalamic connectivity with sensory cortex.

Keywords: Anatomical; Connectivity; Cortex; Diffusion; Schizophrenia; Thalamus.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Anatomical connectivity between the cortex and thalamus in healthy subjects and individuals with schizophrenia.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Thalamocortical anatomical connectivity in schizophrenia: results of voxel-wise analysis. Panel A: Each individual’s cortex was partitioned into 6 regions-of-interest (ROIs) that were used as targets to quantify anatomical connectivity between the thalamus (i.e. seed) and cortex. Panels B and C: Voxel-wise probability maps indicating probability of connectivity of thalamus voxels with each cortical ROI in healthy subjects and individuals with schizophrenia. Panel D: Group differences in anatomical connectivity between the cortex and thalamus (thresholded at cluster-level corrected p(FWE)=.05 for voxel-wise p(uncorrected)=.001). Axial images shown in neurological format (i.e. right side of image=right hemisphere).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Prefrontal cortex (PFC) anatomical connectivity with the thalamus and working memory in schizophrenia. Panel A: Anatomical connectivity in the cluster located at MNI -6 -18 10 which demonstrated reduced structural connectivity in schizophrenia (inset) correlated with Wechsler Memory Scale-III Working Memory Index scores in schizophrenia (r=0.30, p=.020). The same correlation was not significant in healthy subjects (r=−.05, p=.778). Panel B: Anatomical connectivity in a cluster located at MNI -6 -12 2 which demonstrated reduced structural connectivity in schizophrenia (inset) did not correlate with Wechsler Memory Scale-III Working Memory Index scores in schizophrenia (r=.15, p=.264) and healthy subjects (r=−.18, p=.261).

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