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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Klinefelter's syndrome
(KS; karyotype 47,XXY) is associated with specific neurocognitive impairments, especially delayed language development and impaired socioemotional evolution. There is an increased risk for psychiatric disturbances, particularly
schizophrenia
and affective spectrum disorders. A 51-year-old monozygotic male twin with KS is described of whom one was referred for long-lasting paranoid psychotic symptoms. Both were treated with testosterone and had an average level of intelligence. Detailed psychiatric and neuropsychological assessment in the referred patient demonstrated quasi-psychotic symptoms with illusions, delusion-like ideas, paranoid ideation, magical thinking, circumstantial speech and thinking and eccentric behaviours. In addition, attentional deficits and executive dysfunctions could be demonstrated. A diagnosis of schizotypal personality disorder was made. A less pronounced identical clinical picture was found in his brother. The psychopathological phenotype of KS is characterised by a schizotypal personality which originates from its specific cognitive defects and that, with increasing age, may develop into a
schizophrenia
-like psychosis.
...
PMID:Schizotypy: key feature of Klinefelter's syndrome? 2268 40
According to the social defeat (SD) hypothesis, published in 2005, long-term exposure to the experience of SD may lead to sensitization of the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system and thereby increase the risk for
schizophrenia
. The hypothesis posits that SD (ie, the negative experience of being excluded from the majority group) is the common denominator of 5 major
schizophrenia
risk factors: urban upbringing, migration, childhood trauma, low intelligence, and drug abuse. The purpose of this update of the literature since 2005 is to answer 2 questions: (1) What is the evidence that SD explains the association between
schizophrenia
and these risk factors? (2) What is the evidence that SD leads to sensitization of the mesolimbic DA system? The evidence for SD as the mechanism underlying the increased risk was found to be strongest for migration and childhood trauma, while the evidence for urban upbringing, low intelligence, and drug abuse is suggestive, but insufficient. Some other findings that may support the hypothesis are the association between risk for
schizophrenia
and African American ethnicity, unemployment, single status, hearing impairment, autism, illiteracy, short stature,
Klinefelter syndrome
, and, possibly, sexual minority status. While the evidence that SD in humans leads to sensitization of the mesolimbic DA system is not sufficient, due to lack of studies, the evidence for this in animals is strong. The authors argue that the SD hypothesis provides a parsimonious and plausible explanation for a number of epidemiological findings that cannot be explained solely by genetic confounding.
...
PMID:The social defeat hypothesis of schizophrenia: an update. 2406 92
Klinefelter syndrome
is a disorder of variation of sex chromosome, the most common karyotype being 47XXY. Multiple case reports and articles have been published linking the increased prevalence of psychiatric disorders like
Schizophrenia
, Schizophreniform psychosis, Attention deficit hyperkinetic disorder, Learning disorder, etc. and seizure disorder in
Klinefelter syndrome
than in general population, attributing to the extra X chromosome. Here is a case of a 45-year-old gentleman with
Klinefelter syndrome
with
schizophrenia
-like psychosis and seizure disorder. He was diagnosed as
Klinefelter syndrome
15 years back by genetic testing (47XXY) when he was investigated for infertility. His luteinizing hormone (LH) (32.04 mIU/ml) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) (50.70 mIU/ml) levels were high and his testosterone level was low (1.76 ng/ml). He had four episodes of seizures in 2004 for which he was started on phenytoin and sodium valproate, and was seizure-free for past 10 years. He was brought to our hospital in July 2014 with complaints of talking and laughing to self, suspicion, hearing voices and aggressive behaviour, which were persistent mildly for past 15 years and aggravated for past 6 months. He was not going for work for past 15 years, does not mingle with relatives or friends.
...
PMID:A Case Report of Klinefelter Syndrome with Schizophrenia-Like Psychosis and Seizure Disorder. 2666 93
Despite the high prevalence of male infertility, very little is known about its etiology. In recent years however, advances in gene sequencing technology have enabled us to identify a large number of rare single point mutations responsible for impeding all aspects of male reproduction from its embryonic origins, through the endocrine regulation of spermatogenesis to germ cell differentiation and sperm function. Such monogenic mutations aside, the most common genetic causes of male infertility are aneuploidies such as
Klinefelter syndrome
and Y-chromosome mutations which together account for around 20-25% of all cases of non-obstructive azoospermia. Oxidative stress has also emerged as a major cause of male fertility with at least 40% of patients exhibiting some evidence of redox attack, resulting in high levels of lipid peroxidation and oxidative DNA damage in the form of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8OHdG). The latter is highly mutagenic and may contribute to
de novo
mutations in our species, 75% of which are known to occur in the male germ line. An examination of 8OHdG lesions in the human sperm genome has revealed ~9,000 genomic regions vulnerable to oxidative attack in spermatozoa. While these oxidized bases are generally spread widely across the genome, a particular region on chromosome 15 appears to be a hot spot for oxidative attack. This locus maps to a genetic location which has linkages to male infertility, cancer, imprinting disorders and a variety of behavioral conditions (autism, bipolar disease, spontaneous
schizophrenia
) which have been linked to the age of the father at the moment of conception. We present a hypothesis whereby a number of environmental, lifestyle and clinical factors conspire to induce oxidative DNA damage in the male germ line which then triggers the formation
de novo
mutations which can have a major impact on the health of the offspring including their subsequent fertility.
...
PMID:The Role of Genetics and Oxidative Stress in the Etiology of Male Infertility-A Unifying Hypothesis? 3310 Dec 14
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