Presents information as it pertains to Jay Giedd, psychiatrist at
B.F. Skinner, who conducts brain scan of his daughter Alexander every
three months. Background information on Alexander; Objectives of
conducting the brain scans; How Alexander views the procedure; Age at
which Alexander got her first brain scan; Findings of studies conducted
by Giedd; What findings indicated.
By
Jamie Talan, published on July 01, 1998
BRAIN
In the hallowed tradition of B. F. Skinner, psychiatrist Jay Giedd
has turned family life into a living laboratory: every three months, he
gives his daughter a brain scan.
When Alexandra was born in 1993, Giedd was already immersed in a
study of brain growth in children. He knew that his little subject could
provide him with material impossible to come by from scanning a child
every few years.
"Let's wait until she wants to," urged Gwendolyn Giedd, mother of
"Sasha," as she's known. It didn't take long: Sasha was three when she
said, "I want a brain picture."
So every three months, Sasha and her dad head to his lab at the
National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland, where she
crawls into the MRI scanner with her teddy bear. She's became so
comfortable with the procedure that she even falls asleep in the "noise
machine," as she calls it. Now five, she wants to be a scientist.
Giedd and his colleagues have scanned the brains of more than 800
children, many of them with schizophrenia or attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). About a third of the kids are, like Sasha,
behaviorally normal.
They've found that the right side of the brain in boys with ADHD is
8% smaller than that of normal boys' brains. And in children plagued by
phantom voices or images, the brain's ventricles grow larger than normal
between the 14th and 17th year. At the same time, the thalamus, a key
relay center, shrinks.
As the youngest brain in the study, Sasha's scans are telling. A
sneak peek at the blinded data last month revealed that her corpus
callosum--the nerve bundle that allows the two hemispheres to
communicate--has already increased over 15% in size. Her white matter,
which supports important cortical connections, has grown by 20%.
"You can find out a lot more about the developing brain when you
study the same person over time," says the proud father. "Statistics tell
us we need thousands of kids to see a developmental curve, but this is
the only way we can capture the subtle twists and turns."
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