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Sensory gating deficits in the attenuated psychosis syndrome

Sensory gating deficits in the attenuated psychosis syndrome
Sensory gating deficits in the attenuated psychosis syndrome
Background
Individuals with an “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome” (APS) have a 20–40% chance of developing a psychotic disorder within two years; however it is difficult to predict which of them will become ill on the basis of their clinical symptoms alone. We examined whether P50 gating deficits could help to discriminate individuals with APS and also those who are particularly likely to make a transition to psychosis.

Method
36 cases meeting PACE (Personal Assessment and Crisis Evaluation) criteria for the APS, all free of antipsychotics, and 60 controls performed an auditory conditioning–testing experiment while their electroencephalogram was recorded. The P50 ratio and its C–T difference were compared between groups. Subjects received follow-up for up to 2 years to determine their clinical outcome.

Results
The P50 ratio was significantly higher and C–T difference lower in the APS group compared to controls. Of the individuals with APS who completed the follow-up (n = 36), nine (25%) developed psychosis. P50 ratio and the C–T difference did not significantly differ between those individuals who developed psychosis and those who did not within the APS group.

Conclusion
P50 deficits appear to be associated with the pre-clinical phase of psychosis. However, due to the limitations of the study and its sample size, replication in an independent cohort is necessary, to clarify the role of P50 deficits in illness progression and whether this inexpensive and non-invasive EEG marker could be of clinical value in the prediction of psychosis outcomes amongst populations at risk.
0920-9964
277-282
Shaikh, Madiha
e36423c7-2df8-49d2-8064-868398dd1e47
Dutt, A
d26defb6-5fec-4350-9658-dbf06ea90c8c
Broome, M
032c4f07-d44b-4ea7-8710-d8c35bd5bd6a
Vozmediano, A
a78d308a-2cc7-4c75-87b6-9aa0749d0251
Ranlund, S
ce52ac29-9fcc-4e7c-9013-ada5825c5783
Diez, A
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Caseiro, O
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Lappin, J
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Amankwa, S
82be3b01-f4a6-43c7-9e92-57c312bfbe71
Carletti, F
18dc3a9e-36e1-4978-bf48-742df0ff8b05
Fusar-Poli, P
a1ac1bbb-1ffd-4078-98df-d7918650bd2c
Walshe, M
15a153a3-acd4-4e94-88ec-98edf0b516d4
Hall, MH
4ea73858-13e5-43c2-a4cf-04dfd98e7617
Howes, O
de8dd9a6-d51c-488a-ad93-fcd971d145b1
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Murray, RM
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McGuire, P
cbd3515e-f27f-45bc-8e01-c78fcdde138c
Valmaggia, L
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Bramon, E
7de84b41-b812-4c0a-ab4c-ea79a6466657
Shaikh, Madiha
e36423c7-2df8-49d2-8064-868398dd1e47
Dutt, A
d26defb6-5fec-4350-9658-dbf06ea90c8c
Broome, M
032c4f07-d44b-4ea7-8710-d8c35bd5bd6a
Vozmediano, A
a78d308a-2cc7-4c75-87b6-9aa0749d0251
Ranlund, S
ce52ac29-9fcc-4e7c-9013-ada5825c5783
Diez, A
028bdf73-19f1-4bf1-b98b-1e6a2bfe1e4b
Caseiro, O
e9b67ef4-5683-45b7-83a4-1b869547a934
Lappin, J
c4760211-e62a-48a3-b5f3-8c963ad5e10c
Amankwa, S
82be3b01-f4a6-43c7-9e92-57c312bfbe71
Carletti, F
18dc3a9e-36e1-4978-bf48-742df0ff8b05
Fusar-Poli, P
a1ac1bbb-1ffd-4078-98df-d7918650bd2c
Walshe, M
15a153a3-acd4-4e94-88ec-98edf0b516d4
Hall, MH
4ea73858-13e5-43c2-a4cf-04dfd98e7617
Howes, O
de8dd9a6-d51c-488a-ad93-fcd971d145b1
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Murray, RM
580ffa06-6624-49a1-9b0d-23a2a032bac0
McGuire, P
cbd3515e-f27f-45bc-8e01-c78fcdde138c
Valmaggia, L
3486b33e-acd2-4e04-83fa-5c7025ce6e34
Bramon, E
7de84b41-b812-4c0a-ab4c-ea79a6466657

Shaikh, Madiha, Dutt, A, Broome, M, Vozmediano, A, Ranlund, S, Diez, A, Caseiro, O, Lappin, J, Amankwa, S, Carletti, F, Fusar-Poli, P, Walshe, M, Hall, MH, Howes, O, Ellett, Lyn, Murray, RM, McGuire, P, Valmaggia, L and Bramon, E (2015) Sensory gating deficits in the attenuated psychosis syndrome. Schizophrenia Research, 161, 277-282. (doi:10.1016/j.schres.2014.12.021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Individuals with an “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome” (APS) have a 20–40% chance of developing a psychotic disorder within two years; however it is difficult to predict which of them will become ill on the basis of their clinical symptoms alone. We examined whether P50 gating deficits could help to discriminate individuals with APS and also those who are particularly likely to make a transition to psychosis.

Method
36 cases meeting PACE (Personal Assessment and Crisis Evaluation) criteria for the APS, all free of antipsychotics, and 60 controls performed an auditory conditioning–testing experiment while their electroencephalogram was recorded. The P50 ratio and its C–T difference were compared between groups. Subjects received follow-up for up to 2 years to determine their clinical outcome.

Results
The P50 ratio was significantly higher and C–T difference lower in the APS group compared to controls. Of the individuals with APS who completed the follow-up (n = 36), nine (25%) developed psychosis. P50 ratio and the C–T difference did not significantly differ between those individuals who developed psychosis and those who did not within the APS group.

Conclusion
P50 deficits appear to be associated with the pre-clinical phase of psychosis. However, due to the limitations of the study and its sample size, replication in an independent cohort is necessary, to clarify the role of P50 deficits in illness progression and whether this inexpensive and non-invasive EEG marker could be of clinical value in the prediction of psychosis outcomes amongst populations at risk.

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More information

Published date: 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453485
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453485
ISSN: 0920-9964
PURE UUID: 2675aceb-9cec-47ab-8ac9-670609c071d8
ORCID for Lyn Ellett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6051-3604

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Date deposited: 18 Jan 2022 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Madiha Shaikh
Author: A Dutt
Author: M Broome
Author: A Vozmediano
Author: S Ranlund
Author: A Diez
Author: O Caseiro
Author: J Lappin
Author: S Amankwa
Author: F Carletti
Author: P Fusar-Poli
Author: M Walshe
Author: MH Hall
Author: O Howes
Author: Lyn Ellett ORCID iD
Author: RM Murray
Author: P McGuire
Author: L Valmaggia
Author: E Bramon

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