Hypofrontality in schizophrenia: distributed dysfunctional circuits in neuroleptic-naive patients.

 

 

Authors

Andreasen NC. O'Leary DS. Flaum M. Nopoulos P. Watkins

GL. Boles Ponto LL. Hichwa RD.

Institution

Mental Health Clinical Research Centre, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, USA.

Title

Hypofrontality in schizophrenia: distributed dysfunctional circuits in neuroleptic-naive patients.

Source

Lancet. 349(9067):1730-4, 1997 Jun 14.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There have been reports that patients with schizophrenia have decreased metabolic activity in prefrontal cortex. However, findings have been confounded by medication effects, chronic illness, and difficulties of measurement. We aimed to address these problems by examination of cerebral blood flow with positron emission tomography (PET). METHODS: We studied 17 neuroleptic-naive patients at the early stages of illness by means of image analysis and statistical methods that can detect abnormalities at the gyral level. FINDINGS: An initial omnibus test with a randomisation analysis indicated that patients differed from normal controls at the 0.06 level. In the follow-up analysis, three separate prefrontal regions had decreased perfusion (lateral, orbital, medial), as well as regions in inferior temporal and parietal cortex that are known to be anatomically connected. Regions with increased perfusion were also identified (eg, thalamus, cerebellum, retrosplenial cingulate), which suggests an imbalance in distributed cortical and subcortical circuits. INTERPRETATION: These distributed dysfunctional circuits may form the neural basis of schizophrenia through cognitive impairment of the brain, which prevents it from processing input efficiently and producing output effectively, thereby leading to symptoms such as hallucinations, delusions, and loss of volition.

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