Preprint RS-fMRI Evidence of Left Frontal Lobe Developmental Deviation as a Potential Pathognomonic Feature of Autism Spectrum, 2025, Tien-Wen Lee

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by forestglip, Apr 6, 2025.

  1. forestglip

    forestglip Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    RS-fMRI Evidence of Left Frontal Lobe Developmental Deviation as a Potential Pathognomonic Feature of Autism Spectrum Disorder

    Tien-Wen Lee

    Abstract
    Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one of the most prevalent developmental disorders.

    This study utilized 3-Tesla resting-state fMRI data analyzed with the functional parcellation algorithm MOSI (Modularity Analysis and Similarity Measurements) to investigate cortical functional organization in ASD.

    Sixty individuals with ASD and sixty healthy controls were recruited, with no significant differences in age and gender distribution. The MOSI-derived metrics were compared using independent two-sample t-tests.

    The findings revealed a significant reduction in the functional volume of the left frontal lobe, a region critical for language and social processing. This reduction appears to be accompanied by compensatory expansion in other brain regions, suggesting a reallocation of neural resources that may contribute to ASD heterogeneity.

    These results support the notion of left frontal lobe developmental deviation (LFDD) as a parsimonious neural mechanism underlying core ASD features. The accountability of LFDD in various cognitive, symptomatic, and behavioral characteristics of ASD is briefly discussed, along with its implications for male predominance and evolutionary relevance.

    Overall, these findings provide a novel brain science perspective that moves beyond traditional psychological frameworks in explaining major psychiatric disorders.

    Link | PDF (Preprint: MedRxiv) [Open Access]
     
    shak8, Hutan, Murph and 2 others like this.
  2. Murph

    Murph Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    My son has ASD and this describes him to a tee: "compensatory expansion in other brain regions".

    Age 5, he can barely string a sentence together but reads chapter books and knows a surprising amount about prime numbers.
     
    Last edited: Apr 7, 2025
    shak8, NelliePledge, RedFox and 5 others like this.

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