| Literature DB >> 27751654 |
Joachim Cordes1, Andreas Bechdolf2, Christina Engelke3, Kai G Kahl4, Chakrapani Balijepalli5, Christian Lösch6, Joachim Klosterkötter7, Michael Wagner8, Wolfgang Maier9, Andreas Heinz10, Walter de Millas11, Wolfgang Gaebel12, Georg Winterer13, Birgit Janssen14, Christian Schmidt-Kraepelin15, Frank Schneider16, Martin Lambert17, Georg Juckel18, Thomas Wobrock19, Michael Riedel20, Susanne Moebus21.
Abstract
Metabolic Syndrome (MetS) is one of the most common factors underlying the high rate of mortality observed in patients with schizophrenia. Recent research on this topic revealed that many of the patients studied were, in fact, in a medicated state. As such, it is unclear whether MetS is causally associated with the disorder itself or the medication used to treat it. In this study, patients with a clinically high risk of expressing first episode psychosis (CHR) were examined regarding the prevalence of MetS. N=144 unmedicated and antipsychotic-naïve CHR patients, aged between 18 and 42years and suffering from unmanifested prodromal symptoms, were compared with a cohort of N=3995 individuals from the "German Metabolic and Cardiovascular Risk Study" (GEMCAS). A slightly higher prevalence of individual MetS criteria was observed in the CHR group compared to the GEMCAS sample; specifically, the following were noted: a higher blood pressure (35.0% vs. 28.0%), increased waist circumference (17.6% vs. 15.1%), and increased fasting blood glucose (9.4% vs. 4.0%) in CHR patients. Additionally, the rate of reduced HDL cholesterol concentrations was lower in the control group (20.2% vs. 13.3%).Entities:
Keywords: Clinically high risk patients; First episode psychosis; Metabolic syndrome
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27751654 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2016.09.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.939