Association between cerebral structural abnormalities and dermatoglyphic ridge counts in schizophrenia
Abstract
Dermatoglyphic ridge counts (1) reflect ontogenic processes during the second trimester of pregnancy and (2) can be influenced by some of the factors that also affect cerebral development. Therefore, the demonstration of an association between dermatoglyphic and cerebral structural measures in patients with schizophrenia would give credence to the view that the structural brain abnormalities associated with this disorder have their origin early in development. Twenty-eight male subjects with schizophrenia and 19 male controls underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and dermatoglyphic analysis. The pattern of association between the ab-ridge count and nine MRI features was dissimilar in cases and controls for two measures. Associations between dermatoglyphic features, on the one hand, and the frontal CSF (r = .54, P = .004) and fourth ventricular volume (r = .38, P = .05), on the other, were larger in the cases versus the controls (test for interaction, P = .08 and P = .06, respectively). These findings, while in need of replication, support the view that the cerebral structural abnormalities found in patients with schizophrenia are the result of an early pathologic process affecting the development of fetal ectodermal structures.
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PII: S0010-440X(00)23767-X
doi:10.1053/comp.2000.8999
© 2000 Academic Press. All rights reserved.
