Clinical Trial: Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Children and Adolescents With Autism and Multiple Complex Developmental Disorders

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Children and Adolescents With Autism and Multiple Complex Developmental Disorders

Brief Summary: This study aims to investigate the overlap and differences between autism and MCDD as neuropsychiatric childhood disorders. MRI scans are acquired from subjects with autism, subjects with a diagnosis of MCDD and typically developing controls. Volumetric measure of various brain regions are compared between groups. We hypothesize that subjects with autism will have larger brains than controls, whereas subjects with MCDD will have smaller brains.

Detailed Summary:

Autism and Childhood-onset Schizophrenia have been clearly defined as neuropsychiatric disorders since the studies of Kolvin and Rutter. In the early seventies the discussion on a possible overlap between the two types of disorders vanished, but nowadays this issue revives. Amongst all the advances of the DSM diagnostic criteria, the omission of developmental information appears to be a disadvantage. The Pervasive Developmental Spectrum is a broad spectrum, that with exceptions for Autism and some other characteristic disorders, to a large extent consists of an ill-defined restcategory. Most patients actually belong to this last category , the so-called PDD-NOS group. In recent years more has been published about the subgroups within this large group. One of these subgroups, the Multiple Complex Developmental Disorder (MCDD), appears to be a well defined category of patients whose validity has been confirmed by research. In adulthood, a large percentage of this MCDD group seems to develop Schizophrenia or a Schizophrenia related disorder. This again does arise the question of a possible overlap. This discussion is even emphasized by reports notably on -mostly retrospective- studies of premorbid autistic features in patients with Schizophrenia.

In the present day studies on neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorders, there is a search for biological markers or discriminating factors. One of the applied methods is structural imaging. Question marks can be placed on the differing study set-ups and protocols which seriously hinder their inter alia comparison. However one can still conclude that the results of studies on subjects with Autism and Childhood-onset Schizophrenia reveal major differences. However, structural abnormalities do not tell anything about possible functional abnormalities. But detecting structural abnormalities can be helpful in forming hypothesis about the
Sponsor: UMC Utrecht

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Information By: UMC Utrecht

Dates:
Date Received: September 8, 2005
Date Started: January 1999
Date Completion:
Last Updated: April 19, 2007
Last Verified: April 2007