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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Variations in evoked potentials utilizing a photic stimulus in a sample of psychiatric patients compared to a healthy sample were evaluated. A group of patients diagnosed as schizophrenic was tested against a sample of healthy volunteers in a trial combining visual evoked potentials and a simultaneous cognitive processing. The stimulus was a checkerboard pattern presented under three different conditions. The results indicate diminished
P100
and lack the reactivity associated with cognitive processes in schizophrenic group. The P200 component also lacked, in the inpatient group the changes associated with the performance of the trial. Finally the multiple P300 component was shortened in latency and decreased in amplitude in the
schizophrenia
group. Besides, P300 interhemispheric shifts related to trials, were commonly inverted in schizophrenics. Results are interpreted as a lacked interhemispheric coordination in schizophrenics, rather than a fixed hemispheric alteration. Likewise, an attenuation in processing from specific cortical areas to association cortex is concluded.
...
PMID:Visual evoked potentials in a sample of schizophrenic patients. 229 77
In 32 patients with major depressive disorders according to Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC), symptomatology was rated using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and
Schizophrenia
(SADS), and somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) elicited by tactile fingertip stimuli were recorded at the vertex of the scalp. Patients were drug-free except for benzodiazepines. Amplitudes and amplitude/stimulus intensity slopes were adjusted to same sex, age, height, and weight. Uni-and multivariate correlations revealed associations between the N140-P200 amplitude and hypothyroidlike aspects of depression with symptoms such as poor appetite and indecisiveness, and between the
P100
-N140 slope and intrapunitive aspects of depression with symptoms such as negative self-evaluation and suicidal attempts. Neither attention level nor benzodiazepine medication were reflected in these relationships.
...
PMID:Depression and somatosensory evoked potentials: II. Correlations between SEP and depressive phenomenology. 613 58
Visual evoked potentials (VEP) to different flash intensities were recorded at a central site (Cz) plus at homologous temporal and occipital locations in normal and unmedicated schizophrenic subjects. Schizophrenic patients showed an hemisphere asymmetry of the
P100
-N120 peak-trough amplitude with smaller left but larger right hemisphere amplitudes than normal. Further, two subgroups of patients were found with abnormalities lateralized to the left hemisphere. One group was found to have abnormal
P100
amplitude-intensity patterns at the left temporal site while the other group showed deviant N120 amplitude-intensity patterns at the left occipital location. The clinical significance of these results can be seen in the higher nuclear
schizophrenia
(PSE-CATEGO) scores in the left temporal subgroup and the higher hypomania and situational anxiety scores in the left occipital group. Patients also showed slower than normal
P100
and N120 peak latencies.
...
PMID:Visual evoked potentials in schizophrenia. Intensity effects and hemispheric asymmetry. 683 68
Topographic differences in longlatency SSEP and flash VEP data are compared in 3 different psychiatric patient groups. Differences between
schizophrenia
and affective disorder are restricted to somatosensory
P100
amplitude gradients along the antero-posterior axis. In contrast EP-differences between psychiatric patients and dementia are prominent, encompassing both late and early (< 100 ms) responses. Our flash P 2 and somatosensory P 3 data are in accordance with previous findings. Multi-modal positive responses with a latency of 40-80 ms are significantly increased in dementia. This facilitation suggests cortical dysfunction and/or subcortical gating impairment.
...
PMID:Facilitation of early and masking of late cortical responses in dementia. 910 41
The effects of sulpiride, a dopamine D2 receptor antagonist, were studied on visual event-related potentials in a monkey performing in a visual oddball task in order to investigate receptor specific mechanisms in visuo-cognitive processes. Following the injection of 0.35 mg/kg sulpiride i.m., the amplitude and latency of the primary (
P100
) and cognitive (P300) components did not change significantly. When 1.05 mg/kg sulpiride was administered, the latency of the primary and cognitive components increased. The amplitude of the
P100
component decreased, while that of the P300 component increased. These data suggest that D2 receptors play an important role in visuo-cognitive processes in both physiological and pathological conditions such as Parkinson's disease and
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Dopamine D2 receptor blockade alters the primary and cognitive components of visual evoked potentials in the monkey, Macaca fascicularis. 931 Mar 9
The authors investigated the role of visuo-spatial attention in an antisaccade task using event-related potentials (ERPs) in
schizophrenia
patients compared to healthy controls. ERPs between 80-130 ms (
P100
) after stimulus onset showed differences between pro- and antisaccades only for controls and can be related to the suppression of irrelevant stimulus features. Between 150-180 ms (N100), a larger amplitude for anti-compared to prosaccades over centroparietal electrodes showed that processes of visuo-spatial attention seem to be engaged in performance of the antisaccade task. Left temporo-occipitally, this activity was only evident in
schizophrenia
patients, possibly reflecting additional neuronal recruitment in order to perform the antisaccade task successfully.
...
PMID:Neural correlates of visuo-spatial attention during an antisaccade task in schizophrenia: an ERP study. 1582 32
Schizophrenia
(SZ) occurs among a spectrum of disorders with similar characteristics, including schizotypal personality disorder (SPD). Visual processing disturbances have been reported in both disorders, but it is not yet clear which processes are disturbed in both SZ and SPD, suggestive of a common endophenotype, and which appear only in SZ. In order to address this question, the authors evaluated visual event-related potentials (ERPs) elicited during a line-orientation discrimination task in control, SPD, and SZ participants. Visual ERPs allow specification of both the time course and physiological correlates of visual perception and cognition. SZ patients had smaller
P100
and P300a amplitudes and prolonged P300b latency compared to the control group. SZ patients also had smaller N160, N200, P300a, and P300b amplitudes compared to the SPD group. SPD participants did not differ from control participants on any ERP measure. These data documented pervasive abnormalities in visual perception and attention in SZ but not in SPD, suggesting that these visual ERP disturbances may not represent a common endophenotype.
...
PMID:Visual event-related potentials in schizotypal personality disorder and schizophrenia. 1826 90
Schizophrenia
patients show impairments in identifying facial affect; however, it is not known at what stage facial affect processing is impaired. We evaluated 3 event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore stages of facial affect processing in
schizophrenia
patients. Twenty-six
schizophrenia
patients and 27 normal controls participated. In separate blocks, subjects identified the gender of a face, the emotion of a face, or if a building had 1 or 2 stories. Three ERPs were examined: (1)
P100
to examine basic visual processing, (2) N170 to examine facial feature encoding, and (3) N250 to examine affect decoding. Behavioral performance on each task was also measured. Results showed that
schizophrenia
patients'
P100
was comparable to the controls during all 3 identification tasks. Both patients and controls exhibited a comparable N170 that was largest during processing of faces and smallest during processing of buildings. For both groups, the N250 was largest during the emotion identification task and smallest for the building identification task. However, the patients produced a smaller N250 compared with the controls across the 3 tasks. The groups did not differ in behavioral performance in any of the 3 identification tasks. The pattern of intact
P100
and N170 suggest that patients maintain basic visual processing and facial feature encoding abilities. The abnormal N250 suggests that
schizophrenia
patients are less efficient at decoding facial affect features. Our results imply that abnormalities in the later stage of feature decoding could potentially underlie emotion identification deficits in
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Using event related potentials to explore stages of facial affect recognition deficits in schizophrenia. 1849 4
In this work, we attempt to extend to the
schizophrenia
's research the evidence that different frequency bands may emerge from different sources during early-stage visual processing, in a mental state-specific manner, while subjects are passively viewing a visual stimulus. We applied standard pattern reversal stimulation (checker-board), a task with low cognitive demands, coupled to a dense EEG recording system to estimate the neural correlates of the evoked theta, alpha, beta, beta1, and gamma frequency band responses by means of brain electrical tomography (BET). After filtering the evoked activity using different band-passes, a very different picture about the current sources during
P100
will emerge. The results showed notable differences between the two groups. In healthy subjects we localized the significances in the anterior cingulate, caudate nucleus, thalamus, precuneous region, and superior parietal that were more active for gamma band. In patients with
schizophrenia
differences occupy the hippocampus, parahippocampus, thalamus, midbrain, precuneus, and superior parietal regions. Most areas were more active for gamma band except precuneous and superior parietal region more active for theta and alpha frequency band. These sets of regions, in both groups, reflect events that are parallel to and partly independent of the
P100
component, while in the
schizophrenia
, these regions have been previous linked to the major symptoms of the disease. We concluded that this result provides important evidence indicating that the proposed method is able to differentiate electrophysiological patterns in healthy subjects from those in patients with
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:BET differences among simultaneous evoked frequency band responses during early-stage visual processing distinguish schizophrenia from healthy subjects. 1902 20
This study was designed to clarify the consecutive temporal mechanisms and gender effects underlying facial affect processing in patients with
schizophrenia
and normal controls through electrophysiological measurements. The following four event-related potential (ERP) components were chosen as indexes of four distinct stages:
P100
, N170, N250, and P300. A total of 38
schizophrenia
patients (22 females) and 38 normal controls (20 females) were recruited. ERPs were recorded while participants identified emotions in images of faces showing three different states: happy, fearful and neutral. The mean peak amplitude of N170 was significantly lower in
schizophrenia
patients than in normal controls. The mean peak amplitudes of N170 and N250 for fearful emotion were significantly higher than that for happy emotion. The latencies of N170, and P300 were longer in
schizophrenia
patients than in normal controls. Gender effects were found for
P100
peak amplitude and N170 latency, and significant interactions with gender were found for P300 amplitudes and
P100
latency. Our results provide evidences of the dysfunctional ERP patterns underlying facial affect processing in
schizophrenia
patients. Furthermore, the results suggest that gender could be an important controlling factor for facial affect processing in
schizophrenia
patients.
...
PMID:Event-related potential patterns and gender effects underlying facial affect processing in schizophrenia patients. 2021 29
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