Are there any gender differences in the hippocampus volume after head-size correction? A volumetric and voxel-based morphometric study

Adult Male 0301 basic medicine Sex Characteristics Organ Size Hippocampus Magnetic Resonance Imaging Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences R1 Medicine (General) / orvostudomány általában 5. Gender equality Humans Female 10. No inequality
DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2014.04.013 Publication Date: 2014-04-16T04:17:04Z
ABSTRACT
Previous findings on normal sexual dimorphism in hippocampal volume have not always been consistent. This study investigated gender differences in hippocampal volume using different head-size correction strategies. T1-weighted MR images were collected in 99 healthy, Caucasian, university students (66 female subjects; mean age: 23.1 ± 2.3, range: 19-31 years). Sexual dimorphism in hippocampus was investigated by automated MRI volumetry and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) using both general linear model (GLM) and proportion head-size correction strategies. Absolute hippocampal volumes were larger in men than women. After adjusting for head-size, the proportion method indicated larger hippocampi in women than men, while no gender differences were found using the GLM approach. Investigating absolute hippocampal volumes in 15 head-size matched pairs of males and females indicated no gender differences. We suggest that there is no sexual dimorphism in hippocampal size and the apparent gender differences found by the proportion method may have more to do with head-size than with sex. The GLM and proportion head-size correction strategies are not interchangeable and may yield different results. The importance of the present findings is mostly related to scientific reproducibility across MRI volumetry or VBM studies.
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