Gray matter decrease of the anterior cingulate cortex in anorexia nervosa.

@article{Mhlau2007GrayMD,
  title={Gray matter decrease of the anterior cingulate cortex in anorexia nervosa.},
  author={Mark M{\"u}hlau and Christian Gaser and R{\"u}diger Ilg and Bastian Conrad and C. Leibl and Marian Cebulla and Herbert Backmund and Monika Gerlinghoff and Peter Lommer and Andreas Schnebel and Afra M. Wohlschl{\"a}ger and Claus Zimmer and Sabine Nunnemann},
  journal={The American journal of psychiatry},
  year={2007},
  volume={164 12},
  pages={
          1850-7
        }
}
OBJECTIVE The brain regions that are critically involved in the pathophysiology of anorexia nervosa have not been clearly elucidated. Moreover, decrease in cerebral tissue during extreme malnutrition has been demonstrated repeatedly in anorexia nervosa, but data regarding the reversibility of this cerebral tissue decrease are conflicting. The authors examined region-specific gray matter changes and global cerebral volumes in recovered patients with anorexia nervosa. METHOD High-resolution, T1… 
Gray matter decrease distribution in the early stages of Anorexia Nervosa restrictive type in adolescents
In vivo evidence of global and focal brain alterations in anorexia nervosa
Disruption of brain white matter microstructure in women with anorexia nervosa.
BACKGROUND The etiology of anorexia nervosa is still unknown. Multiple and distributed brain regions have been implicated in its pathophysiology, implying a dysfunction of connected neural circuits.
Alterations in brain structure in adults with anorexia nervosa and the impact of illness duration
TLDR
The correlation with duration of illness supports the implication of cerebellar atrophy in the maintenance of low weight and disrupted eating behaviour and illustrates its role in the chronic phase of anorexia nervosa.
Grey matter deficit in long-term recovered anorexia nervosa patients.
  • A. Joos, A. Hartmann, +6 authors A. Zeeck
  • Medicine, Psychology
    European eating disorders review : the journal of the Eating Disorders Association
  • 2011
TLDR
This study supports the assumption that GM volume restitution is incomplete in subjects, who had previously been severely affected by anorexia nervosa, and further supports the meaning of GM reduction in long-term recovered AN patients.
Lower gray matter volumes of frontal lobes and insula in adolescents with anorexia nervosa restricting type: Findings from a Brain Morphometry Study
TLDR
The topographic distribution of GM reduction in a homogenous group of AN-r involves regions responsible for the emotional and cognitive deficits associated with the illness and these findings are discussed in relation to the roles of the insular cortex and the frontal lobes.
Structural Brain Abnormalities in Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa Before and After Weight Recovery and Associated Hormonal Changes
TLDR
The data suggest that brain alterations in adolescents with acute AN are mostly reversible at T1 and that GM recovery in specific brain regions is associated with weight and hormonal normalization.
Structural and functional differences in the cingulate cortex relate to disease severity in anorexia nervosa.
TLDR
This study provides further evidence for confined structural and functional brain abnormalities in patients with anorexia nervosa in brain regions that are involved in perception and integration of bodily stimuli.
Age influences structural brain restoration during weight gain therapy in anorexia nervosa
TLDR
It is shown that structural brain alterations of adult patients with severe AN recuperate independently of the duration of illness during weight-restoration therapy, and the temporal pattern of brain restoration suggests a decrease in restoration rate over the course of treatment.
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TLDR
The persistent gray matter volume deficits in subjects who are weight-recovered from AN suggest that there may be an irreversible component to the brain changes associated with the illness.
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TLDR
The finding of persistent gray matter volume deficits in patients who have recovered their weight after AN suggests an irreversible component to the structural brain changes associated with AN, in addition to a component that resolves on weight recovery.
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TLDR
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