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1 n changes might precede diffuse atrophy with cortical thinning.
2   Children with ADHD had the slowest rate of cortical thinning.
3 ith and contribute additively to hippocampal cortical thinning.
4 es were associated with discrete patterns of cortical thinning.
5 ain development, including hydrocephalus and cortical thinning.
6  of known protective factors for age-related cortical thinning.
7  extrapolated to further adult aging-related cortical thinning.
8 an be characterised by a specific pattern of cortical thinning.
9 osure group showed significant and bilateral cortical thinning.
10 of reduced anterior cingulate activation and cortical thinning.
11 sive enlargement of the medullary cavity and cortical thinning.
12 5%) and glial (61%) density with substantial cortical thinning (30%) were observed.
13 oking is associated with diffuse accelerated cortical thinning, a biomarker of cognitive decline in a
14 s, increased CAC scores were associated with cortical thinning across several brain regions, which ge
15 obar CMBs were independently associated with cortical thinning across the entire cortical regions whi
16 low-risk groups, detecting large expanses of cortical thinning across the lateral surface of the righ
17 isk families also revealed large expanses of cortical thinning across the lateral surface of the righ
18              Regions in this network undergo cortical thinning and breakdown in structural and functi
19 apeutic effect on knee OA pain by preventing cortical thinning and decreases in functional connectivi
20              Conclusion Motor and extramotor cortical thinning and diffusion-tensor MR imaging altera
21 d hydronephrosis and hydroureter with marked cortical thinning and multiple bilateral PET-avid pulmon
22                                  Significant cortical thinning and neural resource allocation changes
23 thy is associated with a distinct pattern of cortical thinning and reduced functional connectivity.
24 methodology allows for a distinction between cortical thinning and reduction in cortical area and rev
25 e relationship between the rates of regional cortical thinning and severity of symptoms of hyperactiv
26    We compared regional percentage change of cortical thinning and subcortical atrophy over 18 months
27 , a significant association between regional cortical thinning and total functional capacity, current
28 uli in direct proportion to the magnitude of cortical thinning and white matter hypoplasia within the
29       Purpose To investigate the patterns of cortical thinning and white matter tract damage in patie
30 lobally, sulcal widening was associated with cortical thinning and, for the frontal cortex, with loss
31 gional change in macrostructure (atrophy and cortical thinning), and microstructure (diffusion metric
32 re children also showed frontal and parietal cortical thinning, and an inverse dose-response relation
33 urological problems, including microcephaly, cortical thinning, and blindness during early developmen
34 or to cortical volume reductions in aging is cortical thinning, and that magnitude of change varies w
35  for Alzheimer's disease was associated with cortical thinning as a function of time since injury.
36  causes selective elimination of neurons and cortical thinning as observed in some forms of mental re
37 how a similar but less pronounced pattern of cortical thinning as patients with a psychotic disorder,
38                                              Cortical thinning associated with THI in the left SFC an
39       These reductions were mainly driven by cortical thinning, but there were also cortical area red
40 l increase, which yields to equally vigorous cortical thinning by early adolescence.
41                                          Our cortical thinning classifier included nine microRNAs, p=
42 nitive impairment showed more severe frontal cortical thinning compared to healthy controls.
43  extensive atrophy and greater percentage of cortical thinning compared to Parkinson's disease with n
44 irst study indicating that prefrontotemporal cortical thinning constitutes a relevant cortical pathom
45 sability and impaired cognitive performance; cortical thinning correlated with increased thalamic TSP
46 aralleled at postmortem by striatal atrophy, cortical thinning, degeneration of medium spiny neurons,
47                                              Cortical thinning distribution correlated with the neuro
48 han the P102L group and this correlated with cortical thinning distribution.
49                                       Slower cortical thinning during adolescence characterizes the p
50 ural brain networks that undergo coordinated cortical thinning during adolescence, which is in part g
51 ally, they examined whether a slower rate of cortical thinning during late childhood and adolescence,
52 particular, the association of exercise with cortical thinning had regional specificity in the bilate
53 nalysis of the fetal brain, diffuse cerebral cortical thinning, high ZIKV RNA loads, and viral partic
54                      The mice also exhibited cortical thinning, impaired neurogenesis and loss of neu
55                  Whether MRI measurements of cortical thinning improve the differentiation between Al
56  at 25 gestational weeks was associated with cortical thinning in 19% of the whole cortex and 24% of
57 eukocytes associated with annualized rate of cortical thinning in a subsample of the NAPLS cohort (N=
58 mpal activity was negatively correlated with cortical thinning in a subset of regions, including the
59 es have found reduced gray matter volume and cortical thinning in acutely underweight patients to nor
60                                              Cortical thinning in AD patients with depressive symptom
61 eased hippocampal activation correlated with cortical thinning in AD-signature regions.
62 n conclusion, the characteristic patterns of cortical thinning in Alzheimer's disease and FTD suggest
63  through cortical thickness, suggesting that cortical thinning in Alzheimer's disease-vulnerable brai
64 ar neuron depletion and progressive cerebral cortical thinning in an animal model of Canavan disease.
65 orms of childhood abuse were associated with cortical thinning in areas critical to the perception an
66 ively normal adults, CAC was associated with cortical thinning in areas related to cognitive function
67 ood and discrepantly accelerated age-related cortical thinning in autism spectrum disorders suggest t
68                               The pattern of cortical thinning in children exposed to prenatal matern
69                        Significant (p < .01) cortical thinning in children primarily in the right fro
70 sing magnetic resonance imaging, we detected cortical thinning in frontal and parietal lobes in group
71 ognitive impairment demonstrated more severe cortical thinning in frontal and temporo-parietal cortic
72  evidence linking the complement system with cortical thinning in humans, a process potentially invol
73 th antisocial personality disorder exhibited cortical thinning in inferior mesial frontal cortices.
74 ty in RLPFC could be partly accounted for by cortical thinning in IPL.
75  reduced higher visual function at baseline, cortical thinning in parietal, occipital and frontal cor
76  an unbiased estimate of the distribution of cortical thinning in patients (relative to controls) by
77                            The appearance of cortical thinning in patients with HCHWA-D indicates tha
78  objectives were to test the hypothesis that cortical thinning in patients with schizophrenia (relati
79 g reductions in brain volume and progressive cortical thinning in patients with schizophrenia who are
80 rnalizing behavior (p < .05) was mediated by cortical thinning in prefrontal areas of the right hemis
81             Children with ADHD show relative cortical thinning in regions important for attentional c
82  better clinical outcome, is associated with cortical thinning in regions important in attentional co
83 ontrast, emotional abuse was associated with cortical thinning in regions relevant to self-awareness
84 omplement pathway may contribute to aberrant cortical thinning in schizophrenia prodromes and reduced
85  symptoms in AD patients are associated with cortical thinning in temporal and parietal regions.
86 elative to controls, patients showed greater cortical thinning in temporal-prefrontal ROIs than in co
87                              More pronounced cortical thinning in the anterior insula and a greater i
88 eference shift was statistically mediated by cortical thinning in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex.
89  was specifically associated with pronounced cortical thinning in the genital representation field of
90 y developing cohort without ADHD showed that cortical thinning in the group not taking psychostimulan
91   The group difference was due to more rapid cortical thinning in the group not taking psychostimulan
92 ood disorders is associated with progressive cortical thinning in the left inferior frontal and prece
93 peduncle, and smaller grey matter volume and cortical thinning in the leg area of the primary motor a
94 rly inattentive symptoms, so did the rate of cortical thinning in the medial and dorsolateral prefron
95      Reduced cortical glucose metabolism and cortical thinning in the medial and lateral parietal lob
96                 Violence was associated with cortical thinning in the medial inferior frontal and lat
97                  These findings suggest that cortical thinning in the right hemisphere produces distu
98                             The magnitude of cortical thinning in the temporal pole was found to corr
99               In particular, an extension of cortical thinning in the temporo-parietal regions in add
100 ere to detect the characteristic patterns of cortical thinning in these two types of dementia, to tes
101 ntrast with previous findings of age-related cortical thinning in this same autism spectrum disorders
102 se of one symptom of adult ADHD, the rate of cortical thinning increased by .0018 mm (SE = .0004, t =
103 ated with cortical thinning, suggesting that cortical thinning is spatially associated with white mat
104  reduction in cortical area and reveals that cortical thinning is the most important factor in volume
105 there was a decrease in the rate of regional cortical thinning of 0.0054 mm/year (SE=0.0019 mm/year).
106  the group not taking psychostimulants (mean cortical thinning of 0.16 mm/year [SD=0.17], compared wi
107 nges in bone composition, and trabecular and cortical thinning of bone accompanied by increased bone
108     The preference shift was associated with cortical thinning of the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex a
109 s who improved were more likely to have less cortical thinning of the left medial frontal cortex and
110                                              Cortical thinning of the left mPFC was associated with a
111                     Patients with ALS showed cortical thinning of the motor-related cortices and a di
112 spinal cord lesions, and global and regional cortical thinning) parameters were assessed in a trainin
113 so in a manner partially mediated by rate of cortical thinning (point estimate=0.078 (95% CIs: 0.003,
114 unters to some extent the vulnerability that cortical thinning poses for developing familial depressi
115 peractivity/impulsivity had a slower rate of cortical thinning, predominantly in prefrontal cortical
116         Albuminuria was also associated with cortical thinning, predominantly in the frontal and occi
117 nce of CSS was independently associated with cortical thinning primarily in the bilateral frontal reg
118 exposed control subjects was associated with cortical thinning, primarily in the superior frontal and
119 cognitive impairment demonstrated widespread cortical thinning relative to controls and atrophy of th
120  underlying white matter was correlated with cortical thinning, suggesting that cortical thinning is
121 l intensity differences were consistent with cortical thinning/sulcal widening and ventricular enlarg
122 n had more protective effects on age-related cortical thinning than either parameter alone.
123 ening (from ages 8-14) and widespread linear cortical thinning that have dissociable relationships wi
124 with chronic schizophrenia showed widespread cortical thinning that particularly affected the prefron
125 ntipsychotics was associated with prefrontal cortical thinning, treatment was also associated with be
126                                              Cortical thinning was assessed by cortical mean thicknes
127  prenatal depression coupled with subsequent cortical thinning was associated with presence of extern
128 erters and healthy controls, and the rate of cortical thinning was correlated with levels of proinfla
129 anatomical differences, significant regional cortical thinning was found in lithium-free euthymic pat
130                                  Significant cortical thinning was identified in the medicated patien
131                                      Whereas cortical thinning was most prominent in the depths of th
132                           Widespread further cortical thinning was observed in patients compared with
133 st that central vision loss may give rise to cortical thinning, while in the same group of people, co
134  The selective topographical associations of cortical thinning with clinical features of HD suggest t
135               Thus, area 46 exhibited marked cortical thinning without apparent neuronal degeneration
136 action: with increasing age, more pronounced cortical thinning would be observed in autism spectrum d

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