Autores
J Douglas Bremner, Meena Vythilingam, Eric Vermetten, Ahsan Nazeer, Jahangir Adil, Sarfraz Khan, Lawrence H Staib, Dennis S Charney
Fecha de publicación
2002/2/15
Revista
Biological psychiatry
Volumen
51
Número
4
Páginas
273-279
Editor
Elsevier
Descripción
Background: Functional neuroimaging studies have implicated dysfunction of orbitofrontal cortex in the symptoms of depression, and a recent postmortem study of depressed patients found reduced density of neurons and glia in this area. The purpose of this study was to measure volume of orbitofrontal cortex and other frontal cortical subregions in patients with major depression.
Methods: Magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure volume of the orbitofrontal cortex and other frontal cortical regions in patients with major depression in remission (n = 15) and comparison subjects (n = 20).
Results: Patients with depression had a statistically significant 32% smaller medial orbitofrontal (gyrus rectus) cortical volume, without smaller volumes of other frontal regions including anterior cingulate Brodmann’s area 24 (subgenual gyrus), anterior cingulate Brodmann’s area 32, subcallosal gyrus (Brodmann’s area 25), or …
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JD Bremner, M Vythilingam, E Vermetten, A Nazeer… - Biological psychiatry, 2002