| Literature DB >> 26166588 |
Hassaan Tohid1, Muhammad Faizan, Uzma Faizan.
Abstract
The relationship of the occipital lobe of the brain with schizophrenia is not commonly studied; however, this topic is considered an essential subject matter among clinicians and scientists. We conducted this systematic review to elaborate the relationship in depth. We found that most schizophrenic patients show normal occipital anatomy and physiology, a minority showed dwindled values, and some demonstrated augmented function and structure. The findings are laborious to incorporate within single disease models that present the involvement of the occipital lobe in schizophrenia. Schizophrenia progresses clinically in the mid-twenties and thirties and its prognosis is inadequate. Changes in the volume, the gray matter, and the white matter in the occipital lobe are quite evident; however, the mechanism behind this involvement is not yet fully understood. Therefore, we recommend further research to explore the occipital lobe functions and volumes across the different stages of schizophrenia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26166588 PMCID: PMC4710336 DOI: 10.17712/nsj.2015.3.20140757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosciences (Riyadh) ISSN: 1319-6138 Impact factor: 0.906
Relevant studies showing the association of the occipital lobe in the brain of schizophrenic patients.
| Author/publication year | Country | Study design | Population | Sample size | Diagnostic criteria | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spalletta G et al, 2015 | Italy USA | Cross-sectional study | 21 schizophrenia into its deficit (SZD) patients, 21 schizophrenia into its non-deficit (SZND) patients, and 21 healthy controls | 63 | DSM-IV-TR | Radial diffusivity was found to be higher in the left forceps minor of schizophrenia into its deficit (SZD) patients, in the left internal capsule of schizophrenia into its non-deficit (SZND) patients, and in the right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus in the whole schizophrenia group. Mean diffusivity increased from healthy controls to SZD patients to SZND patients in the right occipital lobe |
| Guo X et al, 2013 | China USA | Cross-sectional study | 57 patients (27 short DUP * and 30 long DUP*) and 30 healthy controls | 87 | The structured clinical interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders–Clinician Version administered by clinicians (QL and YS) | Long DUP was found to be linked with temporal and occipitotemporal gray matter volume reduction in treatment naive schizophrenia. |
| *Duration of untreated psychosis | ||||||
| Anderson D et al, 2013 | USA | Cross-sectional study | Fifty-five patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or bipolar I disorder | 55 | Clinical interview using the SCID for DSM-IV Disorders | Schizophrenic patients have lower fractional anisotropy in temporal (superior temporal and parahippocampal) and occipital (superior and middle occipital) white matter compared to patients with bipolar disorder and healthy volunteers |
| Nieuwenhuis M 2012, et al | The Netherlands | Cross-sectional study | 239 subjects (128 patients and 111 healthy controls) independent sample of 277 subjects (155 patients and 122 healthy controls) | 516 | Patient=DSM-IV-TR | Gray matter density was found to be increased in the left occipital lobe and the basal ganglia |
| Healthy participants=never been mentally ill | ||||||
| Fujimoto T et al, 2013 | Japan | Cross-sectional study | 10 right-handed male schizophrenia patients and 10 healthy controls | 20 | DSM-IV-TR criteria | A positive correlation of auditory hallucination and left occipital and right frontoparietal lobe areas was found |
| Yao L et al, 2013 | China | Meta-analysis (DTI) | 271 first episode schizophrenia patients and 297 healthy controls | 568 | Inclusion exclusion criteria by keywords | White matter changes in the left inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus was found |
| Plomp G et al, 2013 | Switzerland | Cross-sectional study | 20 schizophrenic patients (14 patients were inpatients; 8 were outpatients) 20 controls | 40 | (DSM-IV) criteria, based on SCID-CV | Activity reduction was mostly seen in lateraloccipital cortex (in the ventral stream) |
| Chan WY et al, 2010 | Singapore | Cross-sectional study | 103 individuals comprising of 39 patients with first-episode schizophrenia and 64 healthy controls | 103 | DSM-IV | First episode schizophrenic patient have lower white matter volume (right temporal-occipital region) diffusion anisotropy in the right temporal-occipital region revealed lower planar anisotropy, and higher linear anisotropy |
| Miyata J et al, 2010 | Japan | Cross-sectional study | 26 schizophrenia patients and 27 healthy controls | 53 | Patient edition of the Structural Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis – 1 Disorder | Facial emotion recognition subtask demonstrated a noteworthy relationship with fractional anisotropy reductions in the left occipital white matter |
| Gutierrez D et al, 2015 | Spain Germany | Cross-Sectional study | 101 first-episode psychosis patients (FEP) and 69 healthy volunteers | 170 | DSM-IV | Gradual reduction of gray matter volume in the frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital lobes of schizophrenic patients was found. |
| Pirnia T et al, 2015 | USA | Cross-sectional study | 26 schizophrenia patients (mean age: 33, 19m/7f), 30 controls (mean age: 29, 24m/6f), and 14 unaffected relatives of patients (mean age: 40, 5m/9f). | 70 | DSM-IV-Patient Version(SCID-1/P) and informant information | Temporo-occipital and parietal region hyper-activations were observed |
| Hart SJ et al, 2013 | USA | Cross-sectional study | 21 children with a first-degree family member with schizophrenia and 21 controls without FHR | 42 | DSM IV Disorders for adults and the Washington University Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for children | It was found that during emotional processing, the FHR group showed reduced anterior cingulate activation, with reduced age-related recruitment of inferior frontal, parietal and occipital areas |
| Rigucci S et al, 2013 | Italy | Cross-sectional study | 19 patients with first episode of non-affective psychosis and 18 controls | 37 | DSM-IV-TR criteria | Loss in facial emotion recognition was found to be linked with temporo-occipital gray matter volume reduction |
| Calderone DJ et al, 2013 | USA | Cross-sectional study | 15 schizophrenic patients and 15 healthy volunteers | 30 | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) and available clinical information | Occipital activation volume reduction was observed |
| Collin G et al, 2013 | The Netherlands | Cross-sectional study | 146 schizophrenia patients and 122 healthy comparison subjects | 268 | DSM-IV | Reduced coupling was most prominent between fronto-parietal cortical regions and subcortical structures, and between frontal and occipital regions. Moreover, a marked association was found among frontal and limbic regions, and for temporo-occipital connections |
| Woodward ND et al, 2012 | USA | Cross-sectional study | 62 patients with schizophrenia and 77 healthy subjects | 139 | The Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnosing DSM-IV Disorders (SCID: 19) | There was no difference in temporal, posterior parietal, or occipito-cortex connectivity with the thalamus |
| Hoptman MJ et al, 2012 | USA | Cross-sectional study | 23 healthy controls 25 patients | 48 | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR Axis I Disorders, Patient version (SCID-I/P) | Notable reductions in VMHC in patients in the occipital lobe, the thalamus, and the cerebellum |
| Fujimoto T et al, 2012 | Japan | Cross-sectional study | 10 right-handed male schizophrenia patients | 10 | DSM-IV-TR criteria | ERD and ERS changes were found in the left temporal pole and midline frontal and anterior cingulate cortex in theta ERS, occipital lobe in alpha ERS, and right temporal-frontal-parietal, midline frontal, and anterior cingulate cortex in beta ERD |
Structural, functional, and metabolic changes in the occipital lobe summary of the study by Steen et al.70
| Changes in the occipital lobe | Evidence for occipital alterations in schizophrenia |
|---|---|
| Structural changes | Reduction in the white matter integrity of the occipital cortex and fusiform gyrus in schizophrenia as compared to controls |
| A higher frequency of reverse asymmetry in the occipital lobe in schizophrenics | |
| No significant change in occipital lobe volume over time in schizophrenia compared to controls | |
| Functional changes | Moderate evidence suggests people with schizophrenia demonstrate reduced activity in the middle occipital gyrus during executive function tasks |
| Moderate quality evidence shows decreased functional activity in the fusiform gyrus and right lingual gyrus during memory encoding, and memory retrieval in schizophrenic patients compared to controls | |
| Moderate quality evidence shows that schizophrenic patients show decreased activation during emotion processing tasks in the fusiform, lentiform and middle occipital gyri | |
| Metabolic changes | Metabolic changes considering N-Acetyl Aspartate were found in the occipital lobe in schizophrenic patients |