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Specific Synonyms
Published in Terence R. Anthoney, Neuroanatomy and the Neurologic Exam, 2017
Fronto-occipital fasciculus (W&W, p. 1030) Subcallosal bundle (B&K, p. 246; CH&L. p. 405)Superior fronto-occipital fasciculus (ibid.; Heim, p. 75, 76 [Fig. 43])Superior occipitofrontal fasciculus (B&K, p. 246)Note, however, that Williams and Warwick (1980) describe the “subcallosal fasciculus” as being “in association with the fronto-occipital arcuate bundle [i.e., fasciculus—p. 1030]” (p. 1034). Of the live recent authors noted to use the term “fronto-occipital fasciculus,” four received their primary professional training in Great Britain and the fifth received his in Spain and the Netherlands.
Reduction of white matter integrity correlates with apathy in Parkinson's disease
Published in International Journal of Neuroscience, 2018
Yang Zhang, Jiayong Wu, Wenbo Wu, Renyuan Liu, Lingen Pang, Dening Guan, Yun Xu
The correlation between FA values and LARS scores are shown in Table 3, Figure 1 and Figure 2. In the correlation analysis of apathetic subjects, after controlling for UPDRS-III, MMSE and BDI-II, the LARS scores were negatively correlated with the areas in the genu (r = −0.852, P < 0.01) and body (r = −0.890, P < 0.01) of corpus callosum, left (r = −0.886, P < 0.01) and right (r = −0.898, P < 0.01) ACR, left superior corona radiata (r = −0.874, P < 0.01) and left cingulum (r = −0.850, P < 0.01). After whole brain analysis, we found that except the ROIs we mentioned above, the FA value of the left posterior corona radiata (r = −0.59, P = 0.01), right superior longitudinal fasciculus (r = −0.577, P = 0.012) and the right superior fronto–occipital fasciculus (r = −0.895, P < 0.01) were also negatively correlated with the LARS scores (shown in the supplemental file).
The World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry (WFSBP) 2020 guidelines for the pharmacological treatment of paraphilic disorders
Published in The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry, 2020
Florence Thibaut, Paul Cosyns, John Paul Fedoroff, Peer Briken, Kris Goethals, John M. W. Bradford
In an unreplicated study, using static MRI, Cantor et al. (2008) described white matter previously unpredicted reductions in fibres linking grey matter regions that respond to sexual stimulation, mostly located in the corpus callosum and bilaterally in the temporal and parietal lobes of 44 men with paedophilia as compared to 53 subjects convicted for non-sexual crimes (reduced white matter volumes were reported in the left superior fronto-occipital fasciculus, and right arcuate fasciculus).