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Multipronged investigation of morphometry and connectivity of hippocampal network in relation to risk for psychosis using ultrahigh field MRI.

Hippocampal abnormalities are associated with psychosis-risk states. Given the complexity of hippocampal anatomy, we conducted a multipronged examination of morphometry of regions connected with hippocampus, and structural covariance network (SCN) and diffusion-weighted circuitry among 27 familial high-risk (FHR) individuals who were past the highest risk for conversion to psychoses and 41 healthy controls using ultrahigh-field high-resolution 7 Tesla (7T) structural and diffusion MRI data. We obtained fractional anisotropy and diffusion streams of white matter connections and examined correspondence of diffusion streams with SCN edges. Nearly 89 % of the FHR group had an axis-I disorder including 5 with schizophrenia. Therefore, we compared the entire FHR group regardless of the diagnosis (All_FHR = 27) and FHR-without-schizophrenia (n = 22) with 41 controls in this integrative multimodal analysis. We found striking volume loss in bilateral hippocampus, particularly the head, bilateral thalamus, caudate, and prefrontal regions. All_FHR and FHR-without-SZ SCNs showed significantly lower assortativity and transitivity but higher diameter compared to controls, but FHR-without-SZ SCN differed on every graph metric compared to All_FHR suggesting disarrayed network with no hippocampal hubs. Fractional anisotropy and diffusion streams were lower in FHR suggesting white matter network impairment. White matter edges showed significantly higher correspondence with SCN edges in FHR compared to controls. These differences correlated with psychopathology and cognitive measures. Our data suggest that hippocampus may be a "neural hub" contributing to psychosis risk. Higher correspondence of white matter tracts with SCN edges suggest that shared volume loss may be more coordinated among regions within the hippocampal white matter circuitry.

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