Emotional and behavioral problems change the development of cerebellar gray matter volume, thickness, and surface area from childhood to adolescence: A longitudinal cohort study

Author:

Wang Yanpei12ORCID,Ma Leilei12ORCID,Chen Rui12,Liu Ningyu12,Zhang Haibo12,Li Yuanyuan12,Wang Jiali12,Hu Mingming12,Zhao Gai12,Men Weiwei3,Tan Shuping4,Gao Jia‐Hong3,Qin Shaozheng12,He Yong12,Dong Qi12,Tao Sha12

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research Beijing Normal University Beijing China

3. Center for MRI Research, Academy for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies Peking University Beijing China

4. Psychiatry Research Center, Beijing HuiLongGuan Hospital Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAimsIncreasing evidence indicates that major neurodevelopmental disorders have potential links to abnormal cerebellar development. However, the developmental trajectories of cerebellar subregions from childhood to adolescence are lacking, and it is not clear how emotional and behavioral problems affect them. We aim to map the developmental trajectories of gray matter volume (GMV), cortical thickness (CT), and surface area (SA) in cerebellar subregions from childhood to adolescence and examine how emotional and behavioral problems change the cerebellar development trajectory in a longitudinal cohort study.MethodThis population‐based longitudinal cohort study used data on a representative sample of 695 children. Emotional and behavioral problems were assessed at baseline and at three annual follow‐ups with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ).ResultsUsing an innovative automated image segmentation technique, we quantified the GMV, CT, and SA of the whole cerebellum and 24 subdivisions (lobules I‐VI, VIIB, VIIIA&B, and IX‐X plus crus I‐II) with 1319 MRI scans from a large longitudinal sample of 695 subjects aged 6–15 years and mapped their developmental trajectories. We also examined sex differences and found that boys showed more linear growth, while girls showed more nonlinear growth. Boys and girls showed nonlinear growth in the cerebellar subregions; however, girls reached the peak earlier than boys. Further analysis found that emotional and behavioral problems modulated cerebellar development. Specifically, emotional symptoms impede the expansion of the SA of the cerebellar cortex, and no gender differences; conduct problems lead to inadequate cerebellar GMV development only in girls, but not boys; hyperactivity/inattention delays the development of cerebellar GMV and SA, with left cerebellar GMV, right VIIIA GMV and SA in boys and left V GMV and SA in girls; peer problems disrupt CT growth and SA expansion, resulting in delayed GMV development, with bilateral IV, right X CT in boys and right Crus I GMV, left V SA in girls; and prosocial behavior problems impede the expansion of the SA and lead to excessive CT growth, with bilateral IV, V, right VI CT, left cerebellum SA in boys and right Crus I GMV in girls.ConclusionsThis study maps the developmental trajectories of GMV, CT, and SA in cerebellar subregions from childhood to adolescence. In addition, we provide the first evidence for how emotional and behavioral problems affect the dynamic development of GMV, CT, and SA in the cerebellum, which provides an important basis and guidance for the prevention and intervention of cognitive and emotional behavioral problems in the future.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Physiology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology

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