Age influences structural brain restoration during weight gain therapy in anorexia nervosa

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作者
Lisa-Katrin Kaufmann
Jürgen Hänggi
Lutz Jäncke
Volker Baur
Marco Piccirelli
Spyros Kollias
Ulrich Schnyder
Chantal Martin-Soelch
Gabriella Milos
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[1] University of Zurich,Department of Consultation
[2] University of Zurich,Liaison Psychiatry and Psychosomatics, University Hospital Zurich
[3] University of Fribourg,Division of Neuropsychology, Department of Psychology
[4] University of Zurich,Unit of Clinical and Health Psychology, Department of Psychology
[5] University of Zurich,International Normal Aging and Plasticity Imaging Center (INAPIC)
[6] University Hospital Zurich,University Research Priority Program (URPP) “Dynamic of Healthy Aging”
[7] University of Zurich,Department of Neuroradiology
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Neuroimaging studies on anorexia nervosa (AN) have consistently reported globally reduced gray matter in patients with acute AN. While first studies on adolescent AN patients provide evidence for the reversibility of these impairments after weight gain, longitudinal studies with detailed regional analysis for adult AN patients are lacking and factors associated with brain restitution are poorly understood. We investigated structural changes in anorexia nervosa using T1-weighted magnetic resonance images with surface-based morphometry. The sample consisted of 26 adult women with severe AN and 30 healthy controls. The longitudinal design comprised three time points, capturing the course of weight-restoration therapy in AN patients at distinct stages of weight gain (BMI ≤ 15.5 kg/m2; 15.5 < BMI < 17.5 kg/m2; BMI ≥ 17.5 kg/m2). Compared to controls, AN patients showed globally decreased cortical thickness and subcortical volumes at baseline. Linear mixed effect models revealed the reversibility of these alterations, with brain restoration being most pronounced during the first half of treatment. The restoration of cortical thickness of AN patients negatively correlated with age, but not duration of illness. After weight restoration, residual group differences of cortical thickness remained in the superior frontal cortex. These findings indicate that structural brain alterations of adult patients with severe AN recuperate independently of the duration of illness during weight-restoration therapy. The temporal pattern of brain restoration suggests a decrease in restoration rate over the course of treatment, with patients’ age as a strong predictor of brain restitution, possibly reflecting decreases of brain plasticity as patients grow older.
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