Brain abnormalities of schizophrenia
probably consist of deviation related to the vulnerability
and pathological changes in association with overt psychosis.
We conducted a cross–sectional comparison in
brain morphology between patients with overt schizophrenia
and schizotypal disorder, a schizophrenia–spectrum
disorder without florid psychotic episode. Voxelbased
morphometry was applied to assess gray matter
volume in 25 patients with schizophrenia, 25 patients
with schizotypal disorder, and 50 healthy control subjects.
In comparison with controls, schizophrenia patients
showed gray matter reductions in the bilateral medial
frontal, inferior frontal, medial temporal, and septal
regions, and the left middle frontal, orbitofrontal, insula,
and superior temporal regions, and an increased gray
matter in the left basal ganglia. Schizotypal disorder patients
showed reductions in the left inferior frontal, insula,
superior temporal, and medial temporal regions.
There was a significant reduction in the left orbitofrontal
region of schizophrenia compared with
schizotypal disorder. Gray matter reductions that are
common to both patient groups such as those in the left
medial temporal and inferior frontal regions may represent
vulnerability to schizophrenia, and additional involvement
of several frontal regions may be crucial to
florid psychosis.