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Changes in Teenager's Brain Structure can Show Signs of Mental Illness

by Shirley Johanna on July 26, 2016 at 4:49 PM

The areas of the brain that change the most during the teenage years have been identified by researchers at the University of Cambridge. The changes may explain the signs of mental illness that develop during late adolescence.


The researchers hope that the findings will shed light on the origins of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, depression, and others.

‘Teenagers with structural changes in their brains were more likely to have genes linked to schizophrenia and depression. ’

A research team from Cambridge University used MRI scans to analyze the brains of almost 300 young people aged 14 to 24. The results revealed the regions of the brain linked to schizophrenia that develop quickest during this time.

The outer region of the brain known as cortex shrink in size and become thinner. As this happens, the levels of myelin increase within the cortex. Myeline was thought to reside mainly in the white matter. But the study revealed that myelin could also be found in the cortex and the levels increase during teenage years.

The increase in myelin occurs in the association cortical areas or major connection points between different regions in the brain's network.

Dr Kirstie Whitaker, of Cambridge University, said, "During our teenage years our brains continue to develop.When we're still children these changes may be more dramatic but in adolescence we see the changes refine the detail. The hubs that connect different regions are becoming set in place as the most important connections strengthen. We believe this is where we are seeing myelin increasing in adolescence."

The MRI scans were compared to a 3D map called the Allen Brain Atlas which pinpoints genes.

The researchers compared these MRI measures to a 3D map called the Allen Brain Atlas which pinpoints genes. The brain regions that exhibited the greatest MRI changes during the teenage years were those in which genes linked to schizophrenia risk were most strongly expressed.

Professor Ed Bullmore, of Cambridge University, said, "Adolescence can be a difficult transitional period and it's when we typically see the first signs of mental health disorders such as schizophrenia and depression.This study gives us a clue why this is the case - it's during these teenage years those brain regions that have the strongest link to the schizophrenia risk genes are developing most rapidly."

"As these regions are important hubs that control how regions of our brain communicate with each other, it shouldn't be too surprising that when something goes wrong there, it will affect how smoothly our brains work."

"Disrupting the development of a brain hub could have as big an impact on the organ's function as disruption of a major airport, like Heathrow, will have on flow of passenger traffic across the airline network," he said.

Dr Raliza Stoyanova, of the Wellcome Trust, which funded the study, said, "A number of mental health conditions first manifest during adolescence. Although we know the adolescent brain undergoes dramatic structural changes the precise nature of those changes and how they may be linked to disease is not understood."

"This study sheds much-needed light on brain development in this crucial time period, and will hopefully spark further research in this area, and tell us more about the origins of serious mental health conditions such as schizophrenia."

The study is published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Source: Medindia

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