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Query: EC:2.3.1.21 (
CPT
)
4,580
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Research suggests that
schizotypal personality disorder
(
SPD
) is a part of the spectrum of schizophrenia-related illnesses. This article hypothesizes that a deficit in the representation and maintenance of context is a core cognitive disturbance in schizophrenia and that
SPD
individuals should demonstrate context-processing deficits. To test this hypothesis, the authors administered 3 versions of their AX-
CPT
task, designed to assess context processing, to 35 healthy controls and 26 individuals with DSM-IV
SPD
. They also administered working memory and selective attention tasks.
SPD
individuals displayed context representation deficits similar to those found in schizophrenia but did not show the same additional deficits in context maintenance. Context processing was strongly associated with working memory and selective attention performance in the
SPD
individuals.
...
PMID:Context-processing deficits in schizotypal personality disorder. 1553 88
Sustained attention deficits represent one of the most robust findings in the study of schizophrenia and schizotypy. However, very little is known about the nature of sustained attention performance and schizotypy in the general adult population. The present study assessed sustained attention performance in a large, normative adult community sample (N = 305) with no history of psychosis using the Continuous Performance Test-identical pairs version (CPT-IP). Associations between overall
CPT
-IP performance and
schizotypal personality disorder
features, controlling for the effects of age, sex, and educational level, revealed diminished sensitivity (d', discriminability), and increased random errors were related to increased reality distortion features. These data, drawn from a general population sample, provided support for overall sustained attention deficits as an endophenotype for schizophrenia liability.
...
PMID:Schizotypy and sustained attention: confirming evidence from an adult community sample. 1686 94
A functional polymorphism of the gene coding for Catechol-O-methyltrasferase (COMT), an enzyme responsible for the degradation of the catecholamine dopamine (DA), epinephrine, and norepinephrine, is associated with cognitive deficits. However, previous studies have not examined the effects of COMT on context processing, as measured by the AX-
CPT
, a task hypothesized to be maximally relevant to DA function. 32 individuals who were either healthy, with
schizotypal personality disorder
, or non-cluster A, personality disorder (OPD) were genotyped at the COMT Val158Met locus. Met/Met (n = 6), Val/Met (n = 10), Val/Val (n = 16) individuals were administered a neuropsychological battery, including the AX-
CPT
and the N-back working memory test. For the AX-
CPT
, Met/Met demonstrated more AY errors (reflecting good maintenance of context) than the other genotypes, who showed equivalent error rates. Val/Val demonstrated disproportionately greater deterioration with increased task difficulty from 0-back to 1-back working memory demands as compared to Met/Met, while Val/Met did not differ from either genotypes. No differences were found on processing speed or verbal working memory. Both context processing and working memory appear related to COMT genotype and the AX-
CPT
and N-back may be most sensitive to the effects of COMT variation.
...
PMID:Catechol-O-methyltransferase Val158Met genotype in healthy and personality disorder individuals: Preliminary results from an examination of cognitive tests hypothetically differentially sensitive to dopamine functions. 1930 Jun 29
Schizotypal personality disorder
is a personality disorder in the schizophrenia spectrum, sharing genetic and neurobiologic characteristics with schizophrenia. Visual contrast detection, found to be abnormal in chronic schizophrenia, was investigated in
schizotypal personality disorder
(
SPD
). Since dopamine in the retina enhances visual contrast detection and
SPD
patients have relatively reduced dopaminergic activity in the brain compared to schizophrenia patients, it was hypothesized that
SPD
patients would have decreased to normal contrast sensitivity. Twenty-one subjects with DSM-IV diagnosed
SPD
, 18 healthy controls, and 12 subjects with a personality disorder unrelated to schizophrenia (OPD) were evaluated for contrast detection using a sinusoidal grating presented at varying temporal frequencies. Subjects also were evaluated neuropsychologically using several standardized neurocognitive tests. A significant effect of subject group was found on the contrast detection threshold (p<0.01) with a significant difference between the
SPD
group and the healthy control group but not between the OPD group and the healthy control group. The
SPD
group had higher contrast detection thresholds at all temporal frequencies tested. Correlations were found between contrast detection and performance on the Trail-Making, N-Back, and
CPT
tasks in
SPD
patients. These results, based upon a paradigm reflecting dopamine activity in the early visual system, highlight the differences as well as similarities between
SPD
and schizophrenia with regard to the dopamine system in schizophrenia spectrum (Siever and Davis, 2004).
...
PMID:Deficient visual sensitivity in schizotypal personality disorder. 2054 11