Regional brain atrophy and aberrant cortical folding relate to anxiety and depression in patients with traumatic brain injury and psychogenic nonepileptic seizures.
Ayushe A SharmaAdam M GoodmanJane B AllendorferNoah S PhilipStephen CorreiaWilliam Curt LaFranceJerzy P SzaflarskiPublished in: Epilepsia (2021)
The diagnosis of PNES was associated with brain atrophy and reduced cortical folding in regions implicated in emotion processing, regulation, and response inhibition. Cortical folds primarily develop during the third trimester of pregnancy and remain relatively constant throughout the remainder of one's life. Thus, the observed aberrations in FDf and sulcal depth could originate early in development. The convergence of environmental, developmental, and neurobiological factors may coalesce to reflect the neuropathophysiological substrate of PNES.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- white matter
- resting state
- single molecule
- preterm birth
- molecular dynamics simulations
- pregnancy outcomes
- depressive symptoms
- functional connectivity
- autism spectrum disorder
- cerebral ischemia
- optical coherence tomography
- pregnant women
- copy number
- brain injury
- life cycle
- temporal lobe epilepsy