4.4 Article

Preserved white matter microstructure in adolescent patients with atypical anorexia nervosa

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 166-174

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eat.23012

Keywords

adolescent; anorexia nervosa; brain; cognitive neuroscience; diffusion tensor imaging; feeding and eating disorders; neuroimaging

Funding

  1. Gillbergska Foundation
  2. Brain Research foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council

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Objective Patients with atypical anorexia nervosa (AN) are often in the normal-weight range at presentation; however, signs of starvation and medical instability are not rare. White matter (WM) microstructural correlates of atypical AN have not yet been investigated, leaving an important gap in our knowledge regarding the neural pathogenesis of this disorder. Method We investigated WM microstructural integrity in 25 drug-naive adolescent patients with atypical AN and 25 healthy controls, using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) with a tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) approach. Psychological variables related to the eating disorder and depressive symptoms were also evaluated by administering the eating disorder examination questionnaire (EDE-Q) and the Montgomery-angstrom sberg depression rating scale (MADRS-S) respectively, to all participants. Results Patients and controls were in the normal-weight range and did not differ from the body mass index standard deviations for their age. No between groups difference in WM microstructure could be detected. Discussion Our findings support the hypothesis that brain structural alterations may not be associated to early-stage atypical AN. These findings also suggest that previous observations of alterations in WM microstructure in full syndrome AN may constitute state-related consequences of severe weight loss. Whether the preservation of WM structure is a pathogenetically discriminant feature of atypical AN or only an effect of a less severe nutritional disturbance, will have to be verified by future studies on larger samples, possibly directly comparing AN and atypical AN.

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