TY - JOUR
T1 - Relationship between alcohol withdrawal seizures and temporal lobe white matter volume deficits
AU - Sullivan, Edith V.
AU - Marsh, Laura
AU - Mathalon, Daniel H.
AU - Lim, Kelvin O.
AU - Pfefferbaum, Adolf
PY - 1996/4/26
Y1 - 1996/4/26
N2 - A previous magnetic resonance imaging study from our laboratory reported significant temporal lobe volume deficits in cortical grey matter, white matter, and anterior hippocampus in chronic alcoholic men relative to controls. In the present study, we reexamined these date and asked whether withdrawal seizure history was predictive of either the hippocampal or the extrahippocampal volume deficits. A review of the medical charts indicated that 11 alcoholics had experienced one or more alcohol-related seizures and 35 were seizure-free; no patient had a seizure disorder unrelated to alcohol. The two alcoholic groups did not differ significantly in age, education, alcohol consumption variables, premorbid intelligence, Memory Quotient, Trail Making, or detection of hidden figures. Although each alcoholic group showed significant bilateral volume deficits of the anterior hippocampus and frontal-parietal and temporal gray matter, relative to controls, the seizure group had significantly smaller temporal lobe white matter volumes then either the control or the seizure-free groups; the latter two groups did not differ from each other. Both alcoholic groups, however, had white matter volume deficits in the frontal-parietal region. Thus, the seizure group accounted for the white matter volume deficits in the temporal lobe previously reported in the full sample of alcoholics. It seems, then, that reduced white matter volume in the temporal lobes may be either a risk factor for or sequela of alcohol withdrawal seizures.
AB - A previous magnetic resonance imaging study from our laboratory reported significant temporal lobe volume deficits in cortical grey matter, white matter, and anterior hippocampus in chronic alcoholic men relative to controls. In the present study, we reexamined these date and asked whether withdrawal seizure history was predictive of either the hippocampal or the extrahippocampal volume deficits. A review of the medical charts indicated that 11 alcoholics had experienced one or more alcohol-related seizures and 35 were seizure-free; no patient had a seizure disorder unrelated to alcohol. The two alcoholic groups did not differ significantly in age, education, alcohol consumption variables, premorbid intelligence, Memory Quotient, Trail Making, or detection of hidden figures. Although each alcoholic group showed significant bilateral volume deficits of the anterior hippocampus and frontal-parietal and temporal gray matter, relative to controls, the seizure group had significantly smaller temporal lobe white matter volumes then either the control or the seizure-free groups; the latter two groups did not differ from each other. Both alcoholic groups, however, had white matter volume deficits in the frontal-parietal region. Thus, the seizure group accounted for the white matter volume deficits in the temporal lobe previously reported in the full sample of alcoholics. It seems, then, that reduced white matter volume in the temporal lobes may be either a risk factor for or sequela of alcohol withdrawal seizures.
KW - Alcoholics
KW - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
KW - Temporal Lobes
KW - White Matter
KW - Withdrawal Seizures
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1530-0277.1996.tb01651.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1530-0277.1996.tb01651.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 8730229
AN - SCOPUS:0029887818
SN - 0145-6008
VL - 20
SP - 348
EP - 354
JO - Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
JF - Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
IS - 2
ER -