BackgroundSalience network (SN) dysconnectivity has been hypothesized to contribute to
schizophrenia. Nevertheless, little is known about the functional and structural
dysconnectivity of SN in subjects at risk for psychosis. We hypothesized that SN
functional and structural connectivity would be disrupted in subjects with At-Risk
Mental State (ARMS) and would be associated with symptom severity and disease
progression.MethodWe examined 87 ARMS and 37 healthy participants using both resting-state functional
magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion tensor imaging. Group differences in SN
functional and structural connectivity were examined using a seed-based approach and
tract-based spatial statistics. Subject-level functional connectivity measures and
diffusion indices of disrupted regions were correlated with CAARMS scores and compared
between ARMS with and without transition to psychosis.ResultsARMS subjects exhibited reduced functional connectivity between the left ventral
anterior insula and other SN regions. Reduced fractional anisotropy (FA) and axial
diffusivity were also found along white-matter tracts in close proximity to regions of
disrupted functional connectivity, including frontal-striatal-thalamic circuits and the
cingulum. FA measures extracted from these disrupted white-matter regions correlated
with individual symptom severity in the ARMS group. Furthermore, functional connectivity
between the bilateral insula and FA at the forceps minor were further reduced in
subjects who transitioned to psychosis after 2 years.ConclusionsOur findings support the insular dysconnectivity of the proximal SN hypothesis in the
early stages of psychosis. Further developed, the combined structural and functional SN
assays may inform the prognosis of persons at-risk for psychosis.
Nearly half of the respondents with any life-time mental disorder would have its onset by age of 22 years, and very few had sought treatment within the first year from onset. The study also identified socio-demographic predictors associated with AOO for mental disorders and delayed treatment contact, thus highlighting a vulnerable subpopulation that can be targeted for outreach and early interventions.
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