Local chemoarchitecture explains widespread lower cortical thickness associated with clinical high risk for psychosis.
Yang X, Agartz I, Andreassen O, Bachman P, Baeza I, Bartholomeusz C, Borgwardt S, Choi S, Colibazzi T, Cooper R, Corcoran C, de la Fuente-Sandoval C, Ebdrup B, Fortea A, Glenthøj BY, Glenthøj LB, Haas S, Hamilton H, Hayes R, He Y, Heekeren K, Ten Velden Hegelstad W, Hooker C, Kaess M, Kasai K, Katagiri N, Kim M, Kindler J, Koike S, Kristensen T, Kwon JS, Lawrie S, Lee J, Lin A, Loewy R, Mathalon D, McGorry P, Michel C, Møller P, Nemoto T, Pena M, Raghava J, Reyes-Madrigal F, Rivera-Chávez L, Rössler W, Sasabayashi D, Schall U, Schmidt A, Smigielski L, Sørensen M, Sugranyes G, Takahashi T, Tamnes C, Tang J, Theodoridou A, Tor J, Uhlhaas P, Værnes T, Via E, Vinogradov S, Waltz J, Westlye L, Wood S, Yamasue H, Yung A, Zhou J, Fusar-Poli P, Mizrahi R, Cropley V, Thompson P, van Amelsvoort T, Jalbrzikowski M, Becker B, Linden DEJ, Hernaus D; ENIGMA Clinical High Risk for Psychosis Working Group.
Yang X, et al. Among authors: kaess m.
Mol Psychiatry. 2026 Apr 4. doi: 10.1038/s41380-026-03586-4. Online ahead of print.
Mol Psychiatry. 2026.
PMID: 41935185