Exploring the effect of chronotype on hippocampal volume and shape: A combined approach.
Charlotte Mary HorneRay NorburyPublished in: Chronobiology international (2018)
Current evidence suggests that acute depression is associated with reduced total hippocampal volume and regional atrophy. Here, using structural magnetic resonance imaging, we assayed linear effects of chronotype on total hippocampal volume and morphology. Later chronotype was associated with localised atrophy in the subiculum region of the right hippocampus in the absence of changes in total volume. The hippocampus forms a key node in a network of brain regions implicated in emotional regulation and alterations in the structure of this region may underpin, in part, the increased vulnerability for depression in late chronotype individuals.
Keyphrases
- cerebral ischemia
- magnetic resonance imaging
- depressive symptoms
- lymph node
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- computed tomography
- climate change
- cognitive impairment
- brain injury
- white matter
- drug induced
- physical activity
- respiratory failure
- hepatitis b virus
- resting state
- prefrontal cortex
- magnetic resonance
- contrast enhanced
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- functional connectivity