Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6797669 | Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2013 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
Adolescents with depression and healthy adolescents appear to differ on rCBF in executive, affective, and motor networks. Dysfunction in these regions may contribute to the cognitive, emotional, and psychomotor symptoms commonly present in adolescent depression. These findings point to possible biomarkers for adolescent depression that could inform early interventions and treatments, and establishes a methodology for using PCASL to noninvasively measure rCBF in clinical and healthy adolescent populations.
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Authors
Tiffany C. Ph.D., Jing B.S., David D. Ph.D., Thomas T. Ph.D., Susan F. Ph.D., Guang B.S., Colm G. Ph.D., Guido K.W. M.D., Jeffrey E. M.B.B.Ch., Owen M.D., Stuart M.D., Fumiko M.D., Ph.D., Dipavo B.S., Korey Ph.D., Robert L. D.O., Martin P. M.D.,