The British Journal of Psychiatry 147: 233-240 (1985)
© 1985 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Ventricular enlargement in schizophrenia. The validity of computerised tomographic findings
MA Reveley
There has been a considerable range in both the prevalence of ventricular
enlargement and values for ventricular size of both schizophrenics and
controls, in studies using computerised tomography (CT). The CT scans of 19
unrelated chronic schizophrenics, all of monozygotic (MZ) twin birth, and
36 age-and-sex-matched normal twins from 18 MZ pairs were examined by
linear, planimetric, and semi- automated computerised methods. All methods
distinguished schizophrenics from controls at approximately the same level
of significance, but partial volume artefact led to a greater than two-
fold variation in apparent ventricular size, and significantly reduced the
validity and reliability of mechanical planimetric and linear measures.
Measurement error may be an important source of artefact in uncontrolled
studies using those techniques, and when comparing absolute values across
studies, but the use of computerised methods should significantly reduce
this source of artefact and allow more meaningful comparison.