Literature DB >> 12597613

Does schizophrenia result from developmental or degenerative processes?

S M Church1, D Cotter, E Bramon, R M Murray.   

Abstract

The debate as to whether schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental or a neurodegenerative disorder has its roots in the latter part of the 19th century when authorities such as Clouston (1891) posited that at least some insanities were "developmental" in origin. These views were soon eclipsed by Kraepelin's (1896) concept of dementia praecox as a degenerative disease, and the latter view carried not only the day but also much of the 20th century. Then, in the 1980s several research groups again began to speculate that schizophrenia might have a significant developmental component (Feinberg, 1982-1983; Schulsinger et al., 1984; Murray et al., 1985; Murray and Lewis, 1987; Weinberger et al., 1987). What became known as the "neurodevelopmental hypothesis" received support from neuropathological studies implicating anomalies in early brain development such as aberrant migration of neurons. Unfortunately, these studies proved difficult, if not impossible, to replicate (Harrison, 1999). The pendulum, therefore, began to swing again, and in the latter part of the 1990s came renewed claims that the clinical progression of the illness was accompanied by continued cerebral ventricular enlargement and reduction in the volumes of certain brain structures. Nevertheless, since few doubt that there is a developmental component to schizophrenia, the question which we will address in this paper is whether schizophrenia is a) simply the final consequence of a cascade of increasing developmental deviance (Bramon et al., 2001), or b) whether there is an additional brain degeneration following onset of psychosis which is superimposed on the developmental impairment (Lieberman, 1999).

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12597613     DOI: 10.1007/978-3-7091-6137-1_8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neural Transm Suppl        ISSN: 0303-6995


  6 in total

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2.  Abnormal white matter integrity in antipsychotic-naïve first-episode psychosis patients assessed by a DTI principal component analysis.

Authors:  Patricia Alvarado-Alanis; Pablo León-Ortiz; Francisco Reyes-Madrigal; Rafael Favila; Oscar Rodríguez-Mayoral; Humberto Nicolini; Mariana Azcárraga; Ariel Graff-Guerrero; Laura M Rowland; Camilo de la Fuente-Sandoval
Journal:  Schizophr Res       Date:  2015-01-22       Impact factor: 4.939

3.  Reduced N-acetyl-aspartate levels in schizophrenia patients with a younger onset age: a single-voxel 1H spectroscopy study.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Stanley; Madhuri Vemulapalli; Jeffrey Nutche; Debra M Montrose; John A Sweeney; Jay W Pettegrew; Frank P MacMaster; Matcheri S Keshavan
Journal:  Schizophr Res       Date:  2007-05-10       Impact factor: 4.939

4.  Cortical surface complexity in frontal and temporal areas varies across subgroups of schizophrenia.

Authors:  Igor Nenadic; Rachel A Yotter; Heinrich Sauer; Christian Gaser
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2013-06-29       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 5.  Theories of schizophrenia: a genetic-inflammatory-vascular synthesis.

Authors:  Daniel R Hanson; Irving I Gottesman
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2005-02-11       Impact factor: 2.103

6.  Neuroimaging of schizophrenia: structural abnormalities and pathophysiological implications.

Authors:  Peter F Buckley
Journal:  Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 2.570

  6 in total

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