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About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study Massoud Stephane, Matthew Hagen, Joel Lee, Johnathan Uecker, Patrecia Pardo, Micheal Kuskowski, Jose Pardo J Psychiatry Neurosci 2006;31(6):396-405

About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

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About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study. Massoud Stephane, Matthew Hagen, Joel Lee, Johnathan Uecker, Patrecia Pardo, Micheal Kuskowski, Jose Pardo. J Psychiatry Neurosci 2006;31(6):396-405. Introduction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron

Emission Tomographic Study

Massoud Stephane, Matthew Hagen, Joel Lee, Johnathan Uecker, Patrecia Pardo,

Micheal Kuskowski, Jose Pardo

J Psychiatry Neurosci 2006;31(6):396-405

Page 2: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Introduction

• Auditory Verbal Hallucinations likely result from a disorder of language neural mechanisms.

• Neuropsychological theories suggest that patients who suffer from AVH experience their own inner speech as someone else speaking.

Page 3: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Possible Theories

• Nonself attribution results from a deficit in a system of corollary discharge networks associated with “willed actions” that allows these actions to be labeled as ones own.

• AVHs result from an altered preconscious planning of discourse that produces involuntary inner speech. These verbal hallucinations are essentially unintended, so they are experienced as hallucinations.

Page 4: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

In Summary

• It is widely accepted that AVHs result from a disorder of language.

• The Nature of this disorder and the mechanisms attributing one’s own inner speech to another are subject to debate.

Page 5: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Hypothesis

• This study will be focused on the neural correlates of single word reading in patients with and without hallucinations.

• We hypothesize that the neural correlates of reading aloud should differentiate the patients who have hallucinations from those who do not.

Page 6: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Participants• 3 Groups: a. 8 Schizophrenic with a history of AVH

b. 10 Schizophrenic Patients with no history of AVH (NAVH group)

c. 12 healthy male control subject volunteers with no history of Schizophrenia

• Schizophrenic groups were compared to eliminate possible error caused by different medications.

• Therefore allowing only the propensity for verbal hallucinations to distinguish AVH from NAVH.

Page 7: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Methods: Task Paradigm

• Stimuli were common concrete nouns presented in lower case letters above there fixation mark.

• Stimuli appeared on a video monitor for 2.75 seconds with a 250-milisecond interstimulas interval.

• 2 Tasks: a. Reading Condition (Read), subjects read loudly and clearly presented nouns.

b. Look Condition (Look), subjects maintained fixation but were not aloud to read out loud or silently.

Page 8: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Scanning and Image Processing

• Scans were preformed with a Siemens ECAT 953B PET camera in 2D mode.

• Linear wrapping was modeled to Talairach space.

• Read and Look conditions were preformed with a paired t test on mean condition images for each subject.

Page 9: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Example of Statistical Analysis

Page 10: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Region of Interest

• Due to the multiple comparison problem a restriction was placed to ROI on areas classically implicated in language processing.

- Wernickes Area

- Broca’s Area

- Supplementary Motor Area (SMA/pre-SMA)

Page 11: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Activity in ROI Across all Subjects

Wernenicke’s area

Left/Right supplementary motor area (SMA)

Broca’s area

Page 12: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Results

• The comparison of (Read - Look) activated Broca’s area, Wernicke’s area, and the SMA area as intended, with minimal differences.

• What clearly differentiated the AVHs from the NAVHs was a right sided laterality of supplementary motor area (SMA) activation in AVHs and left sided laterality in the NAVHs and Control Subjects.

• The only significant difference was that the Read task activated motor planning neural resources.

Page 13: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Activation in of supplementary motor area (SMA)

• Note Control subjects and NAVHs show laterality in the left SMA, while AVHs show laterality in right.

Page 14: About the Mechanisms of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations: A Positron Emission Tomographic Study

Conclusion• Lesions to supplementary motor area (SMA) have been shown to give rise to alien limb syndrome which is described as:

- Normal sensation in a limb, but believes that the limb, while still being a part of their body, behaves in a manner that is totally distinct from him or herself.

• Thus the SMA is considered necessary for self-attribution of self-initiated actions which is why a malfunctioning SMA could cause inner speech.