Post-mortem MRI-based volumetry of the hippocampus in forensic cases of decedents with severe mental illness

This study aimed to determine if results from in vivo studies could be replicated on a post-mortem cohort of decedents who suffered from severe mental illness. We included 96 decedents with either schizophrenia (n = 34), depressive disorder (n = 17), or no known psychiatric diagnosis (n = 45) from April 2015 to January 2017. All cases underwent a T2-weighted cerebral MRI less than 24 h before autopsy. We used a manual segmentation algorithm to define the hippocampus on coronal images and subsequently estimate the volume of the region. The group with schizophrenia had a statis tically significant 9.5% decrease in mean hippocampal volume compared with control subjects, while the group with depression trended towards a reduced volume, but this difference was not statistically significant. Thus we were able to replicate previous results from in vivo studies. PMMRI has unique potential for research in that it can be combined with procedures possible only in the research fields of clinical pathology and forensic science, e.g. histopathological sampling.
Source: Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology - Category: Forensic Medicine Source Type: research