Literature DB >> 30898179

Seasonality of births in horizontal strabismus: comparison with birth seasonality in schizophrenia and other disease conditions.

A B Agarwal1, K Cassinelli2, L A Johnson1,2, K Matsuda3, B Kirkpatrick4, W Yang5, C S von Bartheld1.   

Abstract

Recent work has implicated one type of horizontal strabismus (exotropia) as a risk factor for schizophrenia. This new insight raises questions about a potential common developmental origin of the two diseases. Seasonality of births is well established for schizophrenia. Seasonal factors such as light exposure affect eye growth and can cause vision abnormalities, but little is known about seasonality of births in strabismus. We examined birth seasonality in people with horizontal strabismus in a retrospective study in Washoe County, Nevada, and re-examined similar previously obtained data from Osaka, Japan. We then compared seasonal patterns of births between strabismus, refractive error, schizophrenia and congenital toxoplasmosis. Patients with esotropia had a significant seasonality of births, with a deficit in March, then increasing to an excess in September, while patients with exotropia had a distinctly different pattern, with an excess of births in July, gradually decreasing to a deficit in November. These seasonalities were statistically significant with either χ2 or Kolmogorov-Smirnov-type statistics. The birth seasonality of esotropia resembled that for hyperopia, with an increase in amplitude, while the seasonality for myopia involved a phase-shift. There was no correlation between seasonality of births between strabismus and congenital toxoplasmosis. The pattern of an excess of summer births for people with exotropia was remarkably similar to the well-established birth seasonality of one schizophrenia subtype, the deficit syndrome, but not schizophrenia as a whole. This suggests a testable hypothesis: that exotropia may be a risk factor primarily for the deficit type of schizophrenia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  refractive error; schizophrenia; seasonality of births; strabismus; toxoplasmosis

Year:  2019        PMID: 30898179      PMCID: PMC6755079          DOI: 10.1017/S2040174419000102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Orig Health Dis        ISSN: 2040-1744            Impact factor:   2.401


  59 in total

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Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2012-03-23       Impact factor: 9.306

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Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2010-12-06       Impact factor: 9.306

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  1 in total

1.  Effect of Applying Binocular Visual Training after Slanted Lateral Rectus Recession on Orthophoric Rate and Binocular Visual Function Recovery on Patients with Convergence Insufficiency-Type Intermittent Exotropia.

Authors:  Shuying Dai; Weifeng Sun; Hongjia Xu; Yanan Wang; Yuan Liu; Aijun Han; Lixiao Han; Juan Wang; Rujuan Liao; Sujiang Liu; Yu Gao; Huifang Han
Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med       Date:  2021-10-16       Impact factor: 2.629

  1 in total

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