Neuroimaging in Psychiatry - Brainy Snapshots
- Types: Structural (anatomy) & Functional (activity).
- Structural Imaging:
- CT (Computed Tomography): X-ray based; rapid, for bleeds, gross lesions.
- MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging): Superior soft tissue detail; T1 (anatomy), T2/FLAIR (pathology).
- Functional Imaging:
- fMRI (functional MRI): BOLD signal; maps brain activity via blood flow changes.
- PET (Positron Emission Tomography): Radiotracers for metabolism, receptor density.
- SPECT (Single Photon Emission CT): Simpler, cheaper than PET; blood flow, receptor studies.

⭐ Structural MRI studies in schizophrenia often show enlarged ventricles and reduced gray matter volume, particularly in temporal and frontal lobes.
Neuroimaging in Psychiatry - Structural Sleuths
- Used to identify anatomical brain changes or rule out organic pathology.
| Technique | Principle | Key Uses | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| CT | X-ray absorption | Gross pathology (bleeds, tumors); rapid | Fast; radiation; poor soft tissue. |
| MRI | Proton alignment (magnetic) | Detailed anatomy; subtle lesions; white/gray | No radiation. T1 (anatomy), T2 (pathology), FLAIR (periventricular). |
| 📌 T1: CSF dark; T2: CSF bright (H2O). | |||
| DTI | Water diffusion (white matter) | White matter integrity (e.g., schizophrenia) | ↓Fractional Anisotropy (FA) = tract damage. |
| VBM | Voxel-wise tissue volume | Regional volume changes (e.g., atrophy) | Statistical; often MRI-based. |
⭐ Hippocampal volume reduction, detectable by MRI/VBM, is a significant neurobiological finding in Major Depressive Disorder and Alzheimer's Disease.
Neuroimaging in Psychiatry - Functional Frontiers
- Functional MRI (fMRI): Measures brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow (BOLD signal).
- Non-invasive, no radiation.
- Good spatial resolution, moderate temporal resolution.
- Used in research for task-based activation, resting-state connectivity.

- Positron Emission Tomography (PET): Uses radiotracers to visualize and measure metabolic processes, receptor density, or blood flow.
- Involves ionizing radiation.
- Tracers: $^{18}$F-FDG (glucose metabolism), $^{11}$C-raclopride (D2 receptors).
- 📌 PET Tracers mnemonic: "Fat Dogs Graze, Rarely Catch Deer" ($^{18}$F-FDG, $^{11}$C-Raclopride, $^{15}$O-H$_2$O - though less common now for brain).
- Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT): Similar to PET but uses different radiotracers (e.g., $^{99m}$Tc-HMPAO for cerebral blood flow).
- Lower resolution and sensitivity than PET.
- More accessible and less expensive.
| Feature | fMRI | PET | SPECT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Principle | BOLD signal (blood oxygenation) | Radiotracer decay (positrons) | Radiotracer decay (gamma rays) |
| Resolution | High spatial, moderate temporal | Moderate spatial, poor temporal | Lower spatial, poor temporal |
| Invasiveness | Non-invasive | Invasive (radiotracer injection) | Invasive (radiotracer injection) |
| Primary Use | Task activation, resting-state networks | Neuroreceptor mapping, metabolism, perfusion | Cerebral perfusion, receptor imaging (limited) |
- Non-invasively provides biochemical information.
⭐ fMRI studies in schizophrenia often show hypofrontality (↓ prefrontal cortex activity) during executive tasks.
Neuroimaging in Psychiatry - Disorder Detectives
Key imaging modalities: Structural (CT, MRI, DTI), Functional (fMRI, PET, SPECT).
| Disorder | Key Structural Findings | Key Functional Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Schizophrenia | ↑ Ventricular size (esp. lateral), ↓ cortical volume (frontal, temporal), ↓ hippocampal volume | Hypofrontality (DLPFC during executive tasks), ↑ D2/D3 receptor density (striatum) |
| Bipolar Disorder | ↓ Frontal cortical thickness, ↓ hippocampal volume, ↑ white matter hyperintensities | Altered amygdala-prefrontal connectivity, state-dependent activity changes |
| Depression (MDD) | ↓ Hippocampal volume, ↓ frontal lobe volume, altered cingulate cortex | ↑ Amygdala activity (esp. to negative stimuli), ↓ DLPFC activity |
| Anxiety (PTSD) | ↓ Hippocampal volume, ↓ anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) volume | ↑ Amygdala hyperreactivity, ↓ mPFC activation, ↓ hippocampal function |
| Alzheimer's | ↓ Hippocampal volume (early), diffuse cortical atrophy (later), ventricular enlargement | ↓ Glucose metabolism (temporoparietal regions - PET), ↓ perfusion (SPECT) |
⭐ Ventricular enlargement, particularly of the lateral ventricles, is one of the most consistent structural brain abnormalities found in schizophrenia.
📌 Very Large Heads Sometimes Develop: Ventricles, Limbic (Hippocampus), Hypofrontality, Striatal Dopamine in Schizophrenia (structural/functional).
Neuroimaging in Psychiatry - Clinical Caveats & Horizons
- Utility: Exclude organic causes (tumors, stroke) in atypical presentations. Not for primary psychiatric diagnosis.
- Limitations: Low specificity; incidental findings.
- Ethics: Over-interpretation, cost, radiation (CT).
- Horizons: AI, multimodal imaging, connectomics.
⭐ Structural neuroimaging (CT/MRI) primarily rules out organic pathology in atypical psychiatric presentations, not for diagnosing primary psychiatric illness itself.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Structural imaging (MRI, CT) primarily rules out organic causes; MRI offers superior detail.
- Functional imaging (fMRI, PET, SPECT) assesses brain activity and neurochemistry.
- fMRI uses BOLD signal to map active brain regions.
- PET quantifies neuroreceptors (e.g., D2 in schizophrenia) and metabolism.
- Key findings: ↓ hippocampal volume (depression, PTSD), ↑ ventricular size (schizophrenia).
- Neuroimaging is mainly a research tool, limited for routine psychiatric diagnosis.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app