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Brain, Vol. 122, No. 1, 99-110, January 1999
© 1999 Oxford University Press

The size and fibre composition of the corpus callosum with respect to gender and schizophrenia: a post-mortem study

J. Robin Highley1, Margaret M. Esiri1, Brendan McDonald1, Mario Cortina-Borja2, Brian M. Herron4 and Timothy J. Crow3

1 MRC/Prince of Wales International Centre Schizophrenia Research Group, Department of Neuropathology, Radcliffe Infirmary, 2 Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, 3 POWIC, University Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Headington, Oxford and 4 Regional Neuropathology Laboratory, Royal Hospitals Trust, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK

Correspondence to: MRC/POWIC Schizophrenia Research Group, Department of Neuropathology, Radcliffe Infirmary, Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6HE, UK E-mail: robin.highley{at}clinical-neurology.ox.ac.uk

In this study the cross-sectional area (in n = 14 female controls, 15 male controls, 11 female patients with schizophrenia, 15 male patients with schizophrenia) and fibre composition (in n = 11 female controls, 10 male controls, 10 female patients with schizophrenia, 10 male patients with schizophrenia) of the corpus callosum in post-mortem control and schizophrenic brains was examined. A gender x diagnosis interaction (P = 0.005) was seen in the density of axons in all regions of the corpus callosum except the posterior midbody and splenium. Amongst controls, females had greater density than males; in patients with schizophrenia this difference was reversed. A reduction in the total number of fibres in all regions of the corpus callosum except the rostrum was observed in female schizophrenic patients (P = 0.006; when controlling for brain weight, P = 0.053). A trend towards a reduced cross-sectional area of the corpus callosum was seen in schizophrenia (P = 0.098); however, this is likely to be no more than a reflection of an overall reduction in brain size. With age, all subregions of the corpus callosum except the rostrum showed a significant reduction in cross-sectional area (P = 0.018) and total fibre number (P = 0.002). These findings suggest that in schizophrenia there is a subtle and gender-dependent alteration in the forebrain commissures that may relate to the deviations in asymmetry seen in other studies, but the precise anatomical explanation remains obscure.

corpus callosum; fibre; axon; gender; schizophrenia


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