A comparison of structural morphometry in children and adults with persistent developmental stuttering

Author:

Miller Hilary E1ORCID,Garnett Emily O2ORCID,Heller Murray Elizabeth S13,Nieto-Castañón Alfonso1,Tourville Jason A1,Chang Soo-Eun245ORCID,Guenther Frank H167

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech, Language, & Hearing Sciences, Boston University , Boston, MA 02215 , USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI 48109 , USA

3. Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Temple University , Philadelphia, PA 19122 , USA

4. Department of Communication Disorders, Ewha Womans University , Seoul 03760 , Korea

5. Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Michigan State University , East Lansing, MI 48824 , USA

6. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University , Boston, MA 02215 , USA

7. The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

Abstract

Abstract This cross-sectional study aimed to differentiate earlier occurring neuroanatomical differences that may reflect core deficits in stuttering versus changes associated with a longer duration of stuttering by analysing structural morphometry in a large sample of children and adults who stutter and age-matched controls. Whole-brain T1-weighted structural scans were obtained from 166 individuals who stutter (74 children, 92 adults; ages 3–58) and 191 controls (92 children, 99 adults; ages 3–53) from eight prior studies in our laboratories. Mean size and gyrification measures were extracted using FreeSurfer software for each cortical region of interest. FreeSurfer software was also used to generate subcortical volumes for regions in the automatic subcortical segmentation. For cortical analyses, separate ANOVA analyses of size (surface area, cortical thickness) and gyrification (local gyrification index) measures were conducted to test for a main effect of diagnosis (stuttering, control) and the interaction of diagnosis-group with age-group (children, adults) across cortical regions. Cortical analyses were first conducted across a set of regions that comprise the speech network and then in a second whole-brain analysis. Next, separate ANOVA analyses of volume were conducted across subcortical regions in each hemisphere. False discovery rate corrections were applied for all analyses. Additionally, we tested for correlations between structural morphometry and stuttering severity. Analyses revealed thinner cortex in children who stutter compared with controls in several key speech-planning regions, with significant correlations between cortical thickness and stuttering severity. These differences in cortical size were not present in adults who stutter, who instead showed reduced gyrification in the right inferior frontal gyrus. Findings suggest that early cortical anomalies in key speech planning regions may be associated with stuttering onset. Persistent stuttering into adulthood may result from network-level dysfunction instead of focal differences in cortical morphometry. Adults who stutter may also have a more heterogeneous neural presentation than children who stutter due to their unique lived experiences.

Funder

National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Science Foundation

Matthew K. Smith Stuttering Research Fund

American Speech-Language-Hearing Foundation

Acoustical Society of America

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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