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Showing papers by "Thordur Sigmundsson published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An algorithm is described for fully automated segmentation of dual echo, fast spin-echo MRI data, used to classify data from simulated images of the brain, validating the use of fuzzy-membership values as estimates of partial volume.

163 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings indicate that lack of the normal pattern of frontal and occipital asymmetry is a marker for genetic liability to schizophrenia in families multiply affected with schizophrenia.

90 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An update on the diagnoses and results of linkage analyses using newer highly polymorphic microsatellite markers at or near the loci D 5S76 and D5S39 in the original sample of pedigrees and in two new family samples from Iceland and from Britain is reported.
Abstract: Genetic linkage of schizophrenia to markers at 5q11.2–13.3 had been reported previously in five Icelandic and two British families, but attempts at replication in independent samples have been unsuccessful. We report here an update on the diagnoses and results of linkage analyses using newer highly polymorphic microsatellite markers at or near the loci D5S76 and D5S39 in the original sample of pedigrees and in two new family samples from Iceland and from Britain. The new results show a reduction in evidence for linkage in the original sample and evidence against linkage in the two new family samples. Although it is possible that a rare locus is present, perhaps in the region 5p14.1–13.1 rather than 5q11.2–13.3, it appears most likely that the original positive lod scores represent an exaggeration of the ‘true’ lod scores due to random effects and that the small lod scores we now obtain could have arisen by chance.

15 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study does not support the hypothesis of linkage of schizophrenia to DXS7, and the evidence for a susceptibility locus on this part of the X chromosome is weakened.
Abstract: There have been claims that a gene on the X chromosome may contribute to susceptibility to schizophrenia. Crow (1988) initially proposed that such a gene might lie in the pseudoautosomal region, but when evidence that weakened this hypothesis accumulated, he proposed that a susceptibility locus might be present elsewhere on the sex chromosomes instead. DeLisi et al. (1994) found a small nonsignificant positive lod score between the marker DXS7 and schizophrenia, but other failed to replicate this finding. Another study reported by Crow and DeLisi's group was also weakly positive for this marker (Dann et al., 1997). This locus was then investigated in a collaborative study by Laval et al. (1997), which produced a nonparametric lod score of 2.44. Using a sample of 17 pedigrees from Britain and Iceland, we have also tested the hypothesis of linkage between DXS7 and schizophrenia. The 17 families were selected from a larger sample on the basis of an absence of male-to-male transmission for schizophrenia. These families were originally selected for having multiple cases of schizophrenia within them and for having no cases of bipolar affective disorder. We genotyped subjects for a marker at DXS7 and performed classical lod score and model-free linkage analysis using broad and narrow definitions of affection with schizophrenia. We found strongly negative lod scores and no evidence for linkage using model-free analysis. Therefore, this study does not support the hypothesis of linkage of schizophrenia to DXS7, and the evidence for a susceptibility locus on this part of the X chromosome is weakened.

5 citations