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    Am J Psychiatry. 2004 Oct;161(10):1918-21.

    Volumetric neural correlates of antisaccade eye movements in first-episode psychosis.

    Source

    Department of Psychology, McGill University, Stewart Biological Sciences Building, 1205 Dr. Penfield Ave., Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1 Canada. u.ettinger@iop.kcl.ac.uk.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    The authors investigated the structural brain correlates of antisaccade performance.

    METHOD:

    Magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure the volumes of the prefrontal, premotor, sensorimotor, and occipitoparietal cortices as well as the caudate, thalamus, cerebellar vermis, and cerebrum in 20 first-episode psychosis patients and 18 healthy comparison subjects. Antisaccades were recorded by using infrared oculography.

    RESULTS:

    Groups significantly differed in terms of antisaccade error rate and amplitude gain and tended to differ in terms of latency but not brain region volumes. Premotor cortex volume predicted antisaccade error rate among comparison subjects. In the patient group, caudate volume was related to latency and amplitude gain. Negative symptoms, independent of structural volumes, predicted error rate.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    These findings point to altered structure-function relationships in first-episode psychosis.

    PMID:
    15465994
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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