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  4. Amygdala volumes and associations with socio-emotional competencies in preterm youth: cross-sectional and longitudinal data
 
research article

Amygdala volumes and associations with socio-emotional competencies in preterm youth: cross-sectional and longitudinal data

Pereira Camejo, Marice
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Escobar Saade, Luciana
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Liverani, Maria Chiara
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May 18, 2024
Pediatric Research

Background Socio-emotional difficulties often result from very preterm (VPT) birth. The amygdala's developmental trajectory, including its nuclei, has been recognized as a significant factor in observed difficulties. This study aims to assess the relationship between amygdala volume and socio-emotional competencies in VPT children and adolescents.Methods Socio-emotional competencies were assessed, and amygdala volumes, including subnuclei, were extracted automatically from structural scans in a cross-sectional cohort of VPT (n = 75) and full-term (FT, n = 41) aged 6-14 years. Group differences in amygdala volumes were assessed using ANCOVA, and associations with socio-emotional competencies were studied using partial least squares correlation (PLSC). In a VPT subgroup, additional longitudinal data with amygdala volumes at term-equivalent age (TEA) were manually extracted, growth rates calculated, and associations with school-age socio-emotional competencies investigated using PLSC.Results Using cross-sectional data at school-age, amygdala volumes displayed comparable developmental patterns between the VPT and the FT groups. Greater volumes were associated with more emotional regulation difficulties in VPT and lower affect recognition competencies in FT. In the longitudinal VPT subgroup, no significant associations were found between amygdala volume trajectory and socio-emotional competencies.Conclusion Although our findings suggest typical amygdala development after VPT birth, further research is necessary to elucidate the developmental trajectory of amygdala and the role of resilience factors.Impact In our cohort, amygdala volumes, including subnuclei, displayed comparable developmental trajectories between the very preterm and the full-term groups. Higher amygdala volumes at school-age were associated with higher emotional regulation difficulties in the very-preterm born group, and with lower affect recognition abilities in full-term born children and adolescents. In a subgroup of very-preterm children and adolescents followed from birth to school-age, no significant associations were found between amygdala volumes at term-equivalent age and socio-emotional competencies at school-age.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41390-024-03227-y
Web of Science ID

WOS:001226830100004

Author(s)
Pereira Camejo, Marice
Escobar Saade, Luciana
Liverani, Maria Chiara
Fischi-Gomez, Elda
Gui, Laura
Borradori Tolsa, Cristina
Ha-Vinh Leuchter, Russia
Huppi, Petra Susan
Siffredi, Vanessa  
Date Issued

2024-05-18

Publisher

Springernature

Published in
Pediatric Research
Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Functional Connectivity

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Manual Segmentation

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Brain Volumes

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Birth

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Children

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Age

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Infants

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Born

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Strengths

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Rest

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
MIPLAB  
FunderGrant Number

Foundation Campus Biotech Geneva (FCBG), a foundation of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL)

University of Geneva (UniGe)

University Hospitals of Geneva (HUG)

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Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/208618
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