Literature DB >> 23998682

The development of psychotic disorders in adolescence: a potential role for hormones.

Hanan D Trotman1, Carrie W Holtzman, Arthur T Ryan, Daniel I Shapiro, Allison N MacDonald, Sandra M Goulding, Joy L Brasfield, Elaine F Walker.   

Abstract

This article is part of a Special Issue "Puberty and Adolescence". The notion that adolescence is characterized by dramatic changes in behavior, and often by emotional upheaval, is widespread and longstanding in popular western culture. In recent decades, this notion has gained increasing support from empirical research showing that the peri- and post-pubertal developmental stages are associated with a significant rise in the rate of psychiatric symptoms and syndromes. As a result, interest in adolescent development has burgeoned among researchers focused on the origins of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. Two factors have fueled this trend: 1) increasing evidence from longitudinal research that adolescence is the modal period for the emergence of "prodromal" manifestations, or precursors of psychotic symptoms, and 2) the rapidly accumulating scientific findings on brain structural and functional changes occurring during adolescence and young adulthood. Further, gonadal and adrenal hormones are beginning to play a more prominent role in conceptualizations of adolescent brain development, as well as in the origins of psychiatric symptoms during this period (Walker and Bollini, 2002; Walker et al., 2008). In this paper, we begin by providing an overview of the nature and course of psychotic disorders during adolescence/young adulthood. We then turn to the role of hormones in modulating normal brain development, and the potential role they might play in the abnormal brain changes that characterize youth at clinical high-risk (CHR) for psychosis. The activational and organizational effects of hormones are explored, with a focus on how hormone-induced changes might be linked with neuropathological processes in the emergence of psychosis.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adolescence; Brain development; Hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal [HPA] axis; Hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal [HPG] axis; Prodrome; Psychosis; Puberty

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23998682      PMCID: PMC4070947          DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2013.02.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Behav        ISSN: 0018-506X            Impact factor:   3.587


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