Literature DB >> 26110122

Olfactory function in psychotic disorders: Insights from neuroimaging studies.

Kimberley P Good1, Randii Lynn Sullivan1.   

Abstract

Olfactory deficits on measures of identification, familiarity, and memory are consistently noted in patients with psychotic disorders relative to age-matched controls. Olfactory intensity ratings, however, appear to remain intact while the data on hedonics and detection threshold are inconsistent. Despite the behavioral abnormalities noted, no specific regional brain hypoactivity has been identified in psychosis patients, for any of the olfactory domains. However, an intriguing finding emerged from this review in that the amygdala and pirifom cortices were not noted to be abnormal in hedonic processing (nor was the amygdala identified abnormal in any study) in psychotic disorders. This finding is in contrast to the literature in healthy individuals, in that this brain region is strongly implicated in olfactory processing (particularly for unpleasant odorants). Secondary olfactory cortex (orbitofrontal cortices, thalamus, and insula) was abnormally activated in the studies examined, particularly for hedonic processing. Further research, using consistent methodology, is required for better understanding the neurobiology of olfactory deficits. The authors suggest taking age and sex differences into consideration and further contrasting olfactory subgroups (impaired vs intact) to better our understanding of the heterogeneity of psychotic disorders.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Neuroimaging; Olfaction; Positron emission tomography; Schizophrenia; Single photon emission computed tomography

Year:  2015        PMID: 26110122      PMCID: PMC4473492          DOI: 10.5498/wjp.v5.i2.210

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Psychiatry        ISSN: 2220-3206


  72 in total

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4.  Association Between Anxious Symptom Severity and Olfactory Impairment in Young Adults with Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A Case-Control Study.

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Review 5.  Olfactory impairment in psychiatric disorders: Does nasal inflammation impact disease psychophysiology?

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