Title of article :
Abnormalities in visually guided saccades suggest corticofugal dysregulation in never-treated schizophrenia
Author/Authors :
James L. Reilly، نويسنده , , Margret S.H. Harris، نويسنده , , Matcheri S. Keshavan، نويسنده , , John A. Sweeney، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Background
Previous studies have reported intact visually guided saccades in schizophrenia, but these are limited by potential acute and long-term pharmacological treatment effects, small sample sizes, and a failure to follow patients over time.
Methods
Visually guided saccades were examined in 44 antipsychotic-naive patients experiencing their first episode of schizophrenia prior to treatment and again after 6, 26, and 52 weeks of antipsychotic treatment. Thirty-nine matched healthy individuals were followed over the same period.
Results
Before treatment, patients showed faster saccade latencies to unpredictable visual targets, suggesting reduced inhibitory regulation of brainstem saccade generators by neocortical attentional systems. Risperidone treatment reduced this deficit, suggesting a facilitation of attentional function, but haloperidol treatment did not. However, there was also a modest decline in saccade accuracy after risperidone treatment. The ability to sustain fixation of static central and peripheral targets was unimpaired before and after treatment.
Conclusions
These findings provide evidence for impairments in neocortical attentional systems that cause reduced corticofugal regulation of brainstem systems in schizophrenia. This dysfunction appears to be minimized by the atypical antipsychotic risperidone but at the cost of a subtle reduction in saccade accuracy, possibly mediated via adverse effects on cerebellar vermis function.
Keywords :
First-episode , Eye movements , Spatial attention , Treatment effects , dorsolateralprefrontal cortex , Schizophrenia
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry