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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adenosine is an important modulator of the nervous system that has been implicated in the pathophysiology of
schizophrenia
. We studied peripheral adenosine metabolism by determining the activity of serum adenosine deaminase, which converts adenosine into inosine, and 5'-nucleotidase, which converts AMP into adenosine, in 26 DSM-IV male schizophrenic patients under antipsychotic monotherapy and 26 healthy volunteers balanced for age and race. Schizophrenic patients treated either with typical antipsychotics or clozapine showed increased serum adenosine deaminase activity compared to controls (controls=18.96+/-4.61 U/l; typical=25.09+/-10.98 U/l; clozapine=30.32+/-10.83 U/l; p<0.05,
ANOVA
) and 5'-nucleotidase activity was also increased in patients on clozapine. After adjusting for confounding factors, adenosine deaminase, but not 5'-nucleotidase, alterations remained significant particularly in the clozapine group. This result suggests that either altered adenosine metabolism is present in schizophrenic patients or is influenced by treatment with antipsychotics, particularly clozapine.
...
PMID:Increased serum adenosine deaminase activity in schizophrenic receiving antipsychotic treatment. 1728 63
Research has suggested many with
schizophrenia
experience impairments in metacognition, or difficulties apprehending their own thoughts and the thoughts of others, and that those deficits are not reducible to a single symptom or cognitive impairment. While links between metacognition and more severe levels of symptoms have emerged, less clear is whether there are consistent associations between metacognition and other neurocognitive capacities. Accordingly the current study sought to examine whether different patterns of metacognition deficits have different neurocognitive correlates. Narratives were gathered from 69 adults with
schizophrenia
spectrum disorder using the Indiana Psychiatric Illness Interview along with a symptom interview and neurocognitive battery including subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale III, Wechsler Memory Scale III and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test. Metacognitive capacity within the narrative interview was assessed using the Metacognition Assessment Scale and participants were divided based on those scores into three groups: minimal self-reflectivity/not decentered (n=25); basic self-reflectivity/not decentered (n=33); and basic self-reflectivity/decentered (n=11). Basic self-reflectivity refers to the ability to distinguish one's own thoughts and feelings while decentered refers to the ability to see others as having independent perspectives and relationships with one another. MANOVA and
ANOVA
comparing groups revealed that the participants lacking basic self-reflectivity had significantly poorer working memory and more symptoms of disorganization, while participants able to see others as having independent perspectives and relationships demonstrated better visual memory. Results suggest different deficits in metacognition may be linked to different neurocognitive capacities.
...
PMID:Metacognition within narratives of schizophrenia: associations with multiple domains of neurocognition. 1740 6
The etiology of hippocampal volumetric reductions in
schizophrenia
is largely unknown. In addition to genetic factors, environmental factors might also play a role. High levels of glucocorticoids are known to affect hippocampal volume in disorders such as Cushing's syndrome, but the relationship between cortisol and hippocampal volumes has not been studied in
schizophrenia
. We obtained diurnal salivary cortisol levels and MRI images to explore the link between cortisol levels and regional hippocampal volumes in healthy controls (N=29) and subjects with first episode
schizophrenia
(N=16) at the time of first admission. T1-weighted coronal MR images (slice thickness=1.5 mm) were acquired through the whole head using a 3D Fast SPGR IR Prep sequence on a 1.5 T GE imaging system. Using
ANOVA
, cumulative daily cortisol exposure calculated as area under the curve for each subject revealed significantly higher cortisol levels in the patient group [F(1,43)=4.4 p=0.04]. However, there were no statistically significant associations between the cortisol measures and regional hippocampal volumes in the subjects, except a trend level link between anterior hippocampal volume and cortisol in the positive direction, in parallel to previous findings in healthy adolescents. Our findings do not suggest a robust association between cortisol levels and hippocampal volumes in a first episode
schizophrenia
sample. Larger scale studies are needed to conclude a link between the two measures, yet it is possible that the negative association that was previously shown in other disorders may not apply to
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Cortisol levels in relation to hippocampal sub-regions in subjects with first episode schizophrenia. 1749 Aug 57
This study examined predictors of intensity of vocational specialist support for clients with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder in supported employment. Sixty-nine outpatients with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder were recruited from a community mental health center for 12 months of vocational and cognitive rehabilitation. Neuropsychological test scores, symptom ratings, illness severity, and employment history were used to predict vocational support intensity, expressed as hours coached in ratio to total hours worked over 12 months for each client. Weekly work hours were inversely correlated with intensity of vocational support. Half of the sample averaged 10 to 40 h of work per week and received significantly lower proportions of on-site job coaching than the lowest quartile, which averaged 2 to 5 h of work per week. Regressions predicting support intensity from neuropsychological composite scores, educational/vocational, and hospitalization history were not significant. Significant regressions included PANSS, SANS, and SAPS subscales, after which individual symptoms responsible for explained variance were isolated. SANS social inattention and PANSS active avoidance together predicted 23% of the variance in support intensity. A one-way
ANOVA
comparing work participation quartiles on these symptoms revealed significantly higher levels of active avoidance and social inattention for participants working less than 10 h per week. A profile emerged of the high intensity client as a socially inattentive or avoidant individual requiring a limited work schedule. Results suggest that these clients require more specialist contact because of failure to adequately engage natural supports at work.
...
PMID:Predictors of on-site vocational support for people with schizophrenia in supported employment. 1751 72
The niacin skin test reflects a flush and oedema owing to the production of prostaglandin D2 from arachidonic acid. A diminished response may indicate abnormalities in the phospholipid metabolism, which has been shown in
schizophrenia
. There is evidence that dyslexia might also involve phospholipid abnormalities, therefore we examined the skin response in 51 dyslexics and 45 controls. Four concentrations of aqueous methyl nicotinate were applied topically to the forearm. Flushing was rated using a seven-point scale at 3 min intervals over 21 min. Repeated measures
ANOVA
for the four concentrations across all seven time-points showed no significant effect of subject group, but when analyses were confined to the first 9 min, flushing was reduced in dyslexics. Significant group differences were also found for the lowest niacin concentration (0.0001M) across six out of seven time-points. The results indicate a slightly reduced and delayed response to niacin in dyslexia.
...
PMID:Niacin skin test response in dyslexia. 1789 71
Positron emission tomography measurements of dopaminergic D2-like receptors may provide important insights into disorders such as Parkinson's disease,
schizophrenia
, dystonia and Tourette's syndrome. The positron emission tomography (PET) radioligand [18F](N-methyl)benperidol ([18F]NMB) has high affinity and selectivity for D2-like receptors and is not displaced by endogenous dopamine. The goal of this study is to evaluate the use of a graphical method utilizing a reference tissue region for [18F]-NMB PET analysis by comparisons to an explicit three-compartment tracer kinetic model and graphical method that use arterial blood measurements. We estimated binding potential (BP) in the caudate and putamen using all three methods in 16 humans and found that the three-compartment tracer kinetic method provided the highest BP estimates while the graphical method using a reference region yielded the lowest estimates (P<.0001 by repeated-measures
ANOVA
). However, the three methods yielded highly correlated BP estimates for the two regions of interest. We conclude that the graphical method using a reference region still provides a useful estimate of BP comparable to methods using arterial blood sampling, especially since the reference region method is less invasive and computationally more straightforward, thereby simplifying these measurements.
...
PMID:Validation of the reference tissue model for estimation of dopaminergic D2-like receptor binding with [18F](N-methyl)benperidol in humans. 1835 89
Lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) and fibroblasts provide conveniently derived non-neuronal samples in which to investigate the aetiology of
schizophrenia
(SZ) using gene expression profiling. This assumes that heritable mechanisms associated with risk of SZ have systemic effects and result in changes to gene expression in all tissues. The broad aim of this and other similar studies is that comparison of the transcriptomes of non-neuronal tissues from SZ patients and healthy controls may identify gene/pathway dysregulation underpinning the neurobiological defects associated with SZ. Using microarrays consisting of 18,664 probes we compared gene expression profiles of LCLs from SZ cases and healthy controls. To identify robust associations with SZ that were not patient or tissue specific, we also examined fibroblasts from an independent series of SZ cases and controls using the same microarrays. In both tissue types
ANOVA
analysis returned approximately the number of differentially expressed genes expected by chance. No genes were significantly differentially expressed in either tissue when corrected for multiple testing. Even using relaxed parameters (p < or = 0.05, without multiple testing correction) there were still no differentially expressed genes that also displayed > or = 2-fold change between the groups of SZ cases and controls common to both LCLs and fibroblasts. We conclude that despite encouraging data from previous microarray studies assessing non-neural tissues, the lack of a convergent set of differentially expressed genes associated with SZ using fibroblasts and LCLs indicates the utility of non-neuronal tissues for detection of gene expression differences and/or pathways associated with SZ remains to be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Fibroblast and lymphoblast gene expression profiles in schizophrenia: are non-neural cells informative? 1854 65
Reductions in the size of the anterior callosum have been described for both first-episode
schizophrenia
-spectrum psychosis and established
schizophrenia
, but have not been examined in individuals at ultra-high risk for psychosis (UHR). We compared 100 UHR individuals (27 of whom later developed psychosis) with 38 age-matched control subjects on measures of size and shape of the corpus callosum to determine if changes previously demonstrated in first-episode and established
schizophrenia
are present in the pre-psychotic phase. Each individual's callosum was extracted from the mid-sagittal slice from T1-weighted magnetic resonance images, and total area, length and curvature of the callosum was compared using one-way
ANOVA
, and 39 regional thicknesses via a non-parametric permutation method to account for non-independence of adjacent measures. Total area, length and curvature did not differ between the groups. Compared to both the UHR-NP group and controls, the UHR-P group showed significant regional reductions in the region of the anterior genu of the callosum. The UHR-NP group did not differ from controls. Positive and negative symptoms did not affect regional thickness in either of the patient groups. Cox regression showed that mean anterior genu thickness was highly predictive of a transition to psychosis. Reductions in the thickness of the anterior callosum differentiate between high-risk individuals who transition to psychosis and those who do not, and is highly predictive of transition. These changes may reflect primary pathology of orbitofrontal and medial frontal cortex, or deficits in anterior interhemispheric myelination.
...
PMID:Corpus callosum shape alterations in individuals prior to the onset of psychosis. 1856 78
Synaptophysin, a synaptic vesicle protein and a marker for synaptic density has been found to be reduced in postmortem prefrontal cortex of
schizophrenia
patients, consistent with evidence for synaptic deficits in
schizophrenia
. The contribution of both genetic and environmental factors to the etiology of
schizophrenia
is well established, and obstetric complications have been suggested as a non-genetic risk factor of
schizophrenia
. As there is only scarce evidence for a genetic linkage between synaptophysin's chromosomal locus (Xp11.22) and
schizophrenia
, we hypothesized that early neonatal exposure of rat pups to oxygen restriction would result in reduced frontal cortex synaptophysin protein levels at adulthood. We studied the effects of anoxia or hypoxia on 7-day-old rats frontal cortex synaptophysin protein levels assessed by Western blotting 4 and 7 weeks following the exposure. In hypoxia- or anoxia-exposed rats, synaptophysin protein levels were elevated both 4 and 7 weeks after the exposure. Two-way
ANOVA
followed by post hoc LSD analysis showed that the effect was predominantly at 4 weeks after exposure and that only anoxia-exposed rats differed significantly from control rats (p = 0.019). These results are in contrast to postmortem findings in
schizophrenia
and suggest that reduced synaptophysin protein levels in
schizophrenia
patients' postmortem brain do not result from perinatal oxygen deprivation.
...
PMID:Perinatal oxygen restriction does not result in reduced rat frontal cortex synaptophysin protein levels at adulthood as opposed to postmortem findings in schizophrenia. 1862 94
Designed to help persons with
schizophrenia
to persist and perform better at job placements, the Indianapolis Vocational Intervention Program (IVIP) is a program of cognitive-behavioral group and individual interventions. While its feasibility has been previously demonstrated, it is unknown whether IVIP assists persons to achieve greater levels of participation in vocational rehabilitation and higher levels of job performance. In this study, 100 participants with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder were offered a six month job placement and randomized to receive IVIP (n=50) or support services (n=50) matched for treatment intensity. Number of hours worked was recorded weekly and job performance was assessed biweekly using the Work Behavior Inventory with raters blind to condition. t-tests revealed that participants in the IVIP group worked a significantly greater number of weeks than those in the support condition. Also, repeated measures
ANOVA
revealed the IVIP group worked more hours across that 26 week period as well. And with regards to work performance, repeated measures of the 56 participants who worked for at least two-thirds of the intervention revealed that participants in the IVIP group had generally better work performance than those in the support condition. Results suggest a connection between cognitive-behavioral interventions and higher levels of work performance in people with
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Effects of cognitive behavioral therapy on work outcomes in vocational rehabilitation for participants with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. 1904 56
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