Journal article

Corpus callosum morphology and relationship to orbitofrontal and lateral ventricular volume in teenagers with first-presentation borderline personality disorder

M Walterfang, AM Chanen, S Barton, AG Wood, S Jones, DC Reutens, J Chen, D Velakoulis, PD McGorry, C Pantelis

Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging | ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD | Published : 2010

Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated alterations to fronto-limbic circuitry and callosal structure in borderline personality disorder (BPD). We predicted that a first-presentation BPD cohort who demonstrated orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) reductions would show regional reductions in the anterior corpus callosum. Method: Twenty teenage first-presentation BPD patients and twenty matched healthy controls underwent Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed in 20 teenaged first-presentation BPD patients and 20 matched healthy controls. Corpus callosum size and shape and ventricular volume were estimated using established methods and compared between the two groups. The relationship between illness..

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Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported in part by grant 98-0198 from the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation, Melbourne, Australia and grant 990748 from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Canberra, Australia. Orygen Youth Health Research Centre is supported by an unrestricted grant from the Colonial Foundation, Melbourne, Australia. Dr Mark Walterfang was supported by a Pfizer Neuroscience Grant. Neuroimaging analysis was facilitated by the Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre's Imaging Laboratory, managed by Ms Bridget Soulsby and supported by Neurosciences Victoria.