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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The auditory P300 evoked potential was recorded in 36 subjects: left- (LH) and right-handed (RH) schizophrenic males and LH and RH normal controls. LH and RH normals showed no asymmetry in P300 scalp topography. LH and RH schizophrenics, however, showed lateralized asymmetries in temporal scalp regions: left < right P300 voltage asymmetry in RH schizophrenics and left > right P300 voltage asymmetry in LH schizophrenics. These data suggest that the schizophrenic pathology of P300 neural generators is lateralized according to handedness and provide the first evidence that LH and RH schizophrenics can be dissociated based on left-right voltage asymmetries in P300 topography. These findings further emphasize the need for control of handedness in P300 studies of schizophrenia.
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PMID:Reversed temporal region asymmetries of P300 topography in left- and right-handed schizophrenic subjects. 128 Jan 99

P300 is a late component of evoked potential which meet special relevance to the study of cognitive processes. P300 indexes categorization processes and the context updating of memory. Its latency reflects the stimulus evaluation time, and P300 amplitude is related to some psychological variables such as expectancy, attention and stimulus significance. In this review, clinical correlation between P300 components and mental diseases are reported, especially dementia, schizophrenia and depression. Delayed P300 latency has been found in Alzheimer disease and in other forms of dementia. Reduced P300 amplitude as well as altered topography has been reported in schizophrenia. In depression, reduced P300 amplitude has been related with longer reaction time. Unfortunately, the diagnosis utility of P300 seems limited. The authors also propose an overview of the actual knowledge on neurobiological findings in the generation of the P300 wave. Anatomical data point out the importance of the limbic system, more specifically, of the hippocampus and the locus coeruleus, in generating and modulating P300 wave. Data from the literature on the psychopharmacological modifications induced by cholinergic, catecholaminergic and other agents, are reviewed. Although the dopaminergic and noradrenergic systems are of some importance, these data emphasise the importance of the cholinergic system for the generation and modulation of P300 amplitude and latency. The value and interpretation of these neurobiological and clinical findings are discussed.
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PMID:[P 300 slow potential. Clinical interest in 3 mental diseases and neurobiology: a review]. 129 92

Eighteen frontal trauma patients and 17 age-matched control subjects had quantified EEGs and measurements of sensory (SEP) and auditory evoked potentials (P300) using a Biologic Brain Atlas III system. The findings were compared to the conventional paper EEG, and to the frontal lesion volumes, severity of head injury, and outcome variables. The quantified EEG confirmed the pathological findings detected by visual inspection, but some regional abnormalities were more easily detected by topographic mapping. The regional distribution of pathological slowing corresponded well with the morphological lesions in most patients. The modal frequency of EEG correlated both with lesion volume and injury severity and with the outcome variables. There were no pathological findings in the SEPs, and all but one patient had clearly distinguishable P300 responses. There was a significant reduction in P300 amplitude in the frontal patients at the anterior, but not at the posterior electrodes. The topographical distribution of the P300 changes corresponded well with the morphological lesions. Our findings indicate that the P300 potential is, in part, dependent upon the prefrontal cortical areas. The present study thus supports P300 investigations which have shown amplitude reduction in other disorders (e.g., schizophrenia) with a presumed prefrontal dysfunction.
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PMID:Quantified EEG and cortical evoked responses in patients with chronic traumatic frontal lesions. 137 27

This study compared evoked potential (EP) topography in major depression (MD), schizophrenia and nonpatient controls. EPs to four kinds of stimuli were recorded from 15 locations. Patients were 69 MDs and 52 schizophrenics, currently unmedicated. EP waveforms of 195 controls were subjected to principal component factor analysis (PCA). The structures of 32 factors so extracted have been shown to encompass the data space of disparate groups; they were used to compute factor scores for all subjects. Age- and gender-matched groups were compared. Factor scores were normalized across leads (Z-transform) to distinguish between topographic and mean level differences. Topographic differences (P < 0.05) between MD and controls were demonstrated for scores of 8 factors, with 2 others at P = 0.053. Unlike those for schizophrenia/control comparisons, these topographic differences did not converge regionally in MD. EP findings were not related to duration of withdrawal from drugs. There were few differences between bipolar and unipolar patients. Topographies of 5 factors differed between MDs and schizophrenics; these involved all modalities and reflected long latency, cognition-related events, such as P300. These topographic differences were antero-posterior (AP); values were greater posteriorly in MDs and anteriorly in schizophrenics. Deviant AP gradients appear specific to MD; gradients were similar in schizophrenics and controls.
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PMID:Evoked potential topography in major depression. I. Comparisons with nonpatients and schizophrenics. 145 81

As part of a study of the somatosensory P300 event-related potential (ERP) in paranoid and nonparanoid schizophrenic patients (8) Pearson's product-moment correlations between ERP waveforms were calculated to study the functional relationship between brain areas. ERP were recorded from F3, F4, P3 and P4; interhemispheric (F3 to F4; P3 to P4) and intrahemispheric (F3 to P3; F4 to P4) correlations were obtained. There was no significant difference among the paranoid and nonparanoid patients and healthy controls for both the interhemispheric and the intrahemispheric correlations. The lack of disruption of functional relationship between brain areas on the patients do not support the hypofrontality and the laterality hypothesis of schizophrenia. However, the use of neuroleptics by the patients, the study of the whole waveforms and not parts of them and the use of linked-ears reference could account for these negative results.
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PMID:Functional relationship between brain regions in schizophrenia evaluated with Pearson's correlation between event-related potentials. 149 75

Nineteen subjects with schizophrenia, 6 subjects with related disorders (schizophrenic spectrum disorders (S.S.D.)), and 20 unaffected first degree relatives from a sample of schizophrenic pedigrees, together with 35 normal control subjects, had auditory P300 evoked responses measured, using the "odd-ball" paradigm for stimulation. Bipolar recording on the midline (CZOZ) and two contralateral sites (CZ-mastoid) was carried out. It was found that approximately 40% of schizophrenics/S.S.D.'s had abnormal P300 responses. Abnormalities were seen in latency, RMS response voltage and in the left side response--right side response cross correlation coefficient. Schizophrenics/S.S.D.s showed responses which were topographically different than those of normal controls. Significant left-side/right-side response voltage asymmetry was not observed. In our study, only 10% of unaffected relatives of schizophrenics/S.S.D.'s showed abnormal P300 responses.
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PMID:Auditory P300 studies in schizophrenic subjects and their first degree relatives. 164 73

Previous studies of the auditory P300 event-related potential (ERP) from our laboratory have reported a left- greater than right-sided attenuation in medicated chronic schizophrenics compared with normal controls. A possible confound in these studies has been the use of the linked-ear reference (LER), which has been criticized on the grounds that it might either induce or suppress topographic asymmetries. To test the effects of LER on P300 asymmetries in schizophrenia, we recorded ERPs with both LER and a nose reference (NR) in a group of 20 chronic medicated schizophrenics and in group of 20 age-matched normal controls. We here report: (1) confirmation of our previous P300 findings of left temporal scalp region deficit using both LER and NR with a 28-electrode montage; this feature was prominent in the wave form associated with the target stimulus, without the use of the wave form subtractions of our previous studies; (2) no statistically significant topographic differences between the LER and NR for either the schizophrenic or normal subjects; and (3) better performance of the LER in differentiating schizophrenics versus normal controls, due to lower wave form variability. We conclude that the LER is preferable for studies using subject groups and methodology similar to the present study.
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PMID:Preservation of P300 event-related potential topographic asymmetries in schizophrenia with use of either linked-ear or nose reference sites. 169 73

This study was designed to investigate whether auditory P300 event-related potential and smooth pursuit eye-movement abnormalities in schizophrenia are associated with brain structural changes measured using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Serial coronal MRI scans obtained from 31 schizophrenic subjects and 33 volunteer controls were analysed by a rater who had no knowledge of the subjects' diagnoses. The brain areas measured bilaterally were the temporal lobe, hippocampus, amygdala, parahippocampal gyrus, head of caudate, cingulate cortex, frontal cortex, and the lateral ventricles. The area of the third ventricle, the thickness of the corpus callosum, and the intracranial area were also measured. Auditory P300 and eye tracking performance were recorded on all subjects. There was a significant increase in the latency and a reduction in amplitude of the P300 in the schizophrenic group. Only in the schizophrenic group was P300 latency correlated negatively with the area of the right and left cingulate cortex and positively with the difference in size between the right and left amygdala. In the subgroup of schizophrenic subjects whose P300 latency was greater than 2 standard deviations above the control mean, the area of the left cingulate cortex was significantly smaller than in controls, and the absolute right-left difference in the area of the amygdala was significantly increased. Eye tracking dysfunction in schizophrenia was not related to changes in the amygdala or cingulate cortex but was significantly correlated with enlargement of the lateral ventricles. Schizophrenic subjects with poor eye tracking had significantly larger lateral ventricles than controls. Eye tracking dysfunction, but not P300 abnormality, was correlated with the severity of both positive and negative symptom of schizophrenia. These findings demonstrate that psychophysiological abnormalities are associated with altered brain structure in schizophrenia.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in schizophrenia: altered brain morphology associated with P300 abnormalities and eye tracking dysfunction. 175 19

It has been reported that the amplitude of P300 is low in schizophrenic patients and high risk children. We recorded P300 components of the event-related potentials in first degree relatives of schizophrenic propositi who were considered to be over the age limit of the risk period for manifestation of schizophrenia and compared them with those of schizophrenic patients and controls. Both the first degree relatives and the schizophrenic patients showed lower P300 amplitude than the controls. There was no significant difference between the first degree relatives and schizophrenic patients in the P300 amplitude. These results would indicate that a low P300 amplitude is a trait marker for schizophrenia.
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PMID:P300 in first degree relatives of schizophrenics. 178 38

Attentional dysfunctions in schizophrenia were investigated using a sentence priming task. Schizophrenic patients and healthy control subjects were presented with sentences to which they were required to make a response based on either semantic or physical stimulus features. Schizophrenics' behavioural responses were slower than those of controls, particularly when attending to semantic relationships, but their performance was no less accurate. Both the P300 and the N400 components of the event-related potentials (ERPs) recorded to the sentence completions were attenuated in the schizophrenic sample. The results are interpreted in terms of a deficit in the active maintenance of semantic information in memory and the integration of new information with this representation.
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PMID:Active and passive attention in schizophrenia: an ERP study of information processing in a linguistic task. 179 Feb 65


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