“…Neuroimaging studies of 22q11DS describe how cerebral alterations in the syndrome relate to schizophrenia (Chow, Zipursky, Mikulis, & Bassett, 2002;Zinkstok & van Amelsvoort, 2005). Individuals with 22q11DS display general structural brain abnormalities, including reduced total brain tissue, grey and white matter volumes (Eliez, Schmitt, White, & Reiss, 2000;Kates et al, 2001), increased ventricular and basal ganglia volumes (Eliez, Barnea-Goraly, Schmitt, Liu, & Reiss, 2002), decreased thalamic, hippocampal as well amygdala volumes (Bish, Nguyen, Ding, Ferrante, & Simon, 2004;Debbané, Schaer, Farhoumand, Glaser, & Eliez, 2006;Deboer, Wu, Lee, & Simon, 2007), and a reduction in cingulate grey matter density (Simon et al, 2005). In schizophrenic 22q11DS subjects compared to nonschizophrenic, further anatomical differences include decreased whole-brain total volume and total white matter and increased total and sulcal cerebrospinal fluid volume (van Amelsvoort et al, 2004).…”