Cognitive event-related potentials differentiate schizophrenia with obsessive-compulsive disorder (schizo-OCD) from OCD and schizophrenia without OC symptoms
Cognitive event-related potentials differentiate schizophrenia with obsessive-compulsive disorder (schizo-OCD) from OCD and schizophrenia without OC symptoms
Clinical and neurobiological evidence suggests that concurrent presentation of schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive (schizo-OCD) symptoms represents a distinct clinical entity. Given that obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and schizophrenia have been modeled as having different neurofunctional profiles, the overlap between them represents a heuristic challenge for cognitive and endophenotype research. Event-related potentials (ERPs) may be used to probe neurophysiological correlates of the cognitive, emotional and behavioral disturbances found in neuropsychiatric entities such as schizo-OCD. Here we measure ERPs during a discriminative response task (DRT) in patients presenting with the DSM-IV criteria for both schizophrenia and OCD. We also performed these measurements in patients with OCD without psychotic features, as well as in patients with schizophrenia without OC symptoms. Schizo-OCD patients showed a distinct ERP pattern, with abnormally increased target activation (akin to OCD patients, but unlike the pattern observed in schizophrenic patients) and reduced P300 amplitudes (akin to schizophrenic patients, but unlike OCD patients). Similar to the control subjects, schizo-OCD patients showed larger amplitudes in the non-target condition than in the target condition. These results suggest that schizo-OCD may not only be a distinct clinical entity from pure OCD and schizophrenia, but it may also be characterized by a distinguishable neurophysiologic pattern. Neurobiological underpinnings deserve further considerations and might drive to a definition of a distinctive endophenotype for schizo-OCD in the de-construction of the schizophrenia endophenotype.
Endophenotype, Obsessive-compulsive disorder, P300, Schizo-OCD, Schizophrenia
52-60
Pallanti, Stefano
d64e3605-980e-48a4-b70d-c70027986ec5
Castellini, Giovanni
86c3e41e-29f3-49f7-bc2e-7c757a83501f
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Quercioli, Leonardo
174f44f3-9de1-4ae6-8ebd-cb53b7c2d375
Zaccara, Gaetano
08e4e675-0322-4347-8d0b-ed2fc686a39e
Fineberg, Naomi A.
157dcac1-9fb2-4197-81f3-0167e1224f05
30 November 2009
Pallanti, Stefano
d64e3605-980e-48a4-b70d-c70027986ec5
Castellini, Giovanni
86c3e41e-29f3-49f7-bc2e-7c757a83501f
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Quercioli, Leonardo
174f44f3-9de1-4ae6-8ebd-cb53b7c2d375
Zaccara, Gaetano
08e4e675-0322-4347-8d0b-ed2fc686a39e
Fineberg, Naomi A.
157dcac1-9fb2-4197-81f3-0167e1224f05
Pallanti, Stefano, Castellini, Giovanni, Chamberlain, Samuel R., Quercioli, Leonardo, Zaccara, Gaetano and Fineberg, Naomi A.
(2009)
Cognitive event-related potentials differentiate schizophrenia with obsessive-compulsive disorder (schizo-OCD) from OCD and schizophrenia without OC symptoms.
Psychiatry Research, 170 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2008.11.002).
Abstract
Clinical and neurobiological evidence suggests that concurrent presentation of schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive (schizo-OCD) symptoms represents a distinct clinical entity. Given that obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and schizophrenia have been modeled as having different neurofunctional profiles, the overlap between them represents a heuristic challenge for cognitive and endophenotype research. Event-related potentials (ERPs) may be used to probe neurophysiological correlates of the cognitive, emotional and behavioral disturbances found in neuropsychiatric entities such as schizo-OCD. Here we measure ERPs during a discriminative response task (DRT) in patients presenting with the DSM-IV criteria for both schizophrenia and OCD. We also performed these measurements in patients with OCD without psychotic features, as well as in patients with schizophrenia without OC symptoms. Schizo-OCD patients showed a distinct ERP pattern, with abnormally increased target activation (akin to OCD patients, but unlike the pattern observed in schizophrenic patients) and reduced P300 amplitudes (akin to schizophrenic patients, but unlike OCD patients). Similar to the control subjects, schizo-OCD patients showed larger amplitudes in the non-target condition than in the target condition. These results suggest that schizo-OCD may not only be a distinct clinical entity from pure OCD and schizophrenia, but it may also be characterized by a distinguishable neurophysiologic pattern. Neurobiological underpinnings deserve further considerations and might drive to a definition of a distinctive endophenotype for schizo-OCD in the de-construction of the schizophrenia endophenotype.
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Published date: 30 November 2009
Keywords:
Endophenotype, Obsessive-compulsive disorder, P300, Schizo-OCD, Schizophrenia
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Local EPrints ID: 493118
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493118
ISSN: 0165-1781
PURE UUID: 0c106f3e-9898-4a68-a906-c039308eff9c
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Date deposited: 23 Aug 2024 16:42
Last modified: 24 Aug 2024 02:00
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Author:
Stefano Pallanti
Author:
Giovanni Castellini
Author:
Samuel R. Chamberlain
Author:
Leonardo Quercioli
Author:
Gaetano Zaccara
Author:
Naomi A. Fineberg
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