Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging
Volume 171, Issue 2 , Pages 138-143, 28 February 2009

Caudate volumes in public transportation workers exposed to trauma in the Stockholm train system

  • Jeffrey Chee Leong Looi

      Affiliations

    • Research Centre for the Neurosciences of Ageing, Academic Unit of Psychological Medicine, Australian National University Medical School, The Canberra Hospital, Canberra, Australia
    • Karolinska Institute, Department of Neurobiology, Caring Sciences & Society, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Research Centre for the Neurosciences of Ageing, Academic Unit of Psychological Medicine, Australian National University Medical School, Building 4, Level 2, The Canberra Hospital, PO Box 11, Woden ACT 2605, Australia. Tel.: +61 2 6205 1977; fax: +61 2 6244 4964.
  • ,
  • Jerome Joseph Maller

      Affiliations

    • Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
    • Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
  • ,
  • Marco Pagani

      Affiliations

    • Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, CNR, Rome, Italy
    • Department of Nuclear Medicine, Karolinska Hospital, Solna, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Göran Högberg

      Affiliations

    • Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Section for Psychiatry, Huddinge, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Olof Lindberg

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska Institute, Department of Neurobiology, Caring Sciences & Society, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Benny Liberg

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska Institute, Department of Neurobiology, Caring Sciences & Society, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Lisa Botes

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska University Hospital, Hospital Physics & Radiology, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Eva-Lena Engman

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska University Hospital, Hospital Physics & Radiology, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Yi Zhang

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska University Hospital, Hospital Physics & Radiology, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Leif Svensson

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska University Hospital, Hospital Physics & Radiology, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden
  • ,
  • Lars-Olof Wahlund

      Affiliations

    • Karolinska Institute, Department of Neurobiology, Caring Sciences & Society, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden

Received 6 September 2007; received in revised form 12 February 2008; accepted 29 March 2008.

Abstract 

The caudate nucleus is a structure implicated in the neural circuitry of psychological responses to trauma. This study aimed to quantify the volume of the caudate in persons exposed to trauma. Thirty-six subjects under 65 were recruited from transport workers in Stockholm who reported having been unintentionally responsible for a person-under-the-train accident or among employees having experienced an assault in their work (1999–2001) between 3 months and 6 years before MRI scanning. In those exposed to the trauma, a DSM-IV diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was made by an independent psychiatrist, with subjects being classified as PTSD or no PTSD. MRI data were analyzed blindly to all clinical information by an experienced rater using a standardized manual tracing protocol to quantify the volume of the caudate. Within-group comparisons of PTSD (n=19) and no PTSD (n=17) found the right caudate nucleus to be significantly (9%) larger than the left: a right hemisphere baseline asymmetry. A multivariate analysis of covariance (MANCOVA) was conducted to assess the volume of the caudate nucleus (right and left) in relation to the diagnosis of no PTSD (n=17) or PTSD (n=19). After adjustment for the covariates (age, sex, intracranial volume, years since trauma, and number of trauma episodes), there was a significant difference in raw right caudate nucleus volume between subjects with PTSD compared with those without PTSD. Volume of the left caudate nucleus was not significantly different between the PTSD and no PTSD groups. The right caudate volume in the PTSD group was 9% greater compared with the no PTSD group. There is a larger right hemisphere volume of the caudate within those exposed to trauma with active PTSD compared with those without PTSD, superimposed upon a baseline caudate asymmetry.

Keywords: Caudate, Tracing, ROI, VOI, MRI, Volumetrics, Post-traumatic stress disorder

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PII: S0925-4927(08)00054-1

doi:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2008.03.011

Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging
Volume 171, Issue 2 , Pages 138-143, 28 February 2009