Brain : a journal of neurology
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High-functioning autistic and normal school-age boys were compared using a whole-brain morphometric profile that includes both total brain volume and volumes of all major brain regions. We performed MRI-based morphometric analysis on the brains of 17 autistic and 15 control subjects, all male with normal intelligence, aged 7-11 years. Clinical neuroradiologists judged the brains of all subjects to be clinically normal. ⋯ This morphometric profile of the autistic brain suggests that there is an overall increase in brain volumes compared with controls. Additionally, results suggest that there may be differential effects driving white matter to be larger and cerebral cortex and hippocampus-amygdala to be relatively smaller in the autistic than in the typically developing brain. The cause of this apparent dissociation of cerebral cortical regions from subcortical regions and of cortical white from grey matter is unknown, and merits further investigation.
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Hyperactivity in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) is seen in animal models of Parkinson's disease, and lesioning of the STN dramatically relieves the animal's parkinsonism. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the STN is an effective treatment for patients with advanced Parkinson's disease. We have studied the effects of a unilateral lesion placed in the STN in predominantly hemi-parkinsonian patients. ⋯ This patient was successfully treated with deep brain stimulator placement in the region of H2/ZI. Unilateral STN lesions can be made safely and are an effective alternative to thalamotomy, pallidotomy and unilateral STN DBS for the treatment of asymmetrical tremor-dominant advanced Parkinson's disease. Com bined lesioning of the dorsolateral STN and H2/ZI is particularly effective.