Literature DB >> 32431263

Schizophrenia phenomenology revisited: positive and negative symptoms are strongly related reflective manifestations of an underlying single trait indicating overall severity of schizophrenia.

Abbas F Almulla1, Hussein K Al-Hakeim2, Michael Maes3,4,5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To examine whether negative symptoms, psychosis, hostility, excitation, and mannerism (PHEM symptoms), formal thought disorders (FTD) and psychomotor retardation (PMR) are interrelated phenomena in major neurocognitive psychosis (MNP) or deficit schizophrenia and whether those domains belong to an underlying latent vector reflecting general psychopathology.
METHODS: In this study, we recruited 120 patients with MNP or deficit schizophrenia and 54 healthy subjects and measured the above-mentioned symptom domains.
RESULTS: In MNP, there were significant associations between negative and PHEM symptoms, FTD and PMR. A single latent trait, which is essentially unidimensional, underlies these key domains of schizophrenia and MNP and additionally shows excellent internal consistency reliability, convergent validity, and predictive relevance. Confirmatory Tedrad Analysis indicates that this latent vector fits a reflective model. The lack of discriminant validity shows that positive (and PHEM or psychotic) and negative symptoms greatly overlap and probably measure the same latent construct. Soft independent modeling of class analogy (SIMCA) shows that MNP (diagnosis based on negative symptoms) is better modeled using PHEM symptoms, FTD, and PMR than negative symptoms.
CONCLUSIONS: In stable phase MNP, which is a restricted sample of the schizophrenia population, negative and PHEM symptoms, FTD and PMR belong to one underlying latent vector reflecting overall severity of schizophrenia (OSOS). The bi-dimensional concept of "positive" and "negative" symptoms cannot be validated and, therefore, future research in stable phase schizophrenia should consider that the latent phenomenon OSOS as well as its reflective manifestations are the key factors of schizophrenia phenomenology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Deficit schizophrenia; inflammation; neuroimmune; phenomenology; symptom domains

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32431263     DOI: 10.1017/S1092852920001182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  CNS Spectr        ISSN: 1092-8529            Impact factor:   3.790


  4 in total

Review 1.  False dogmas in mood disorders research: Towards a nomothetic network approach.

Authors:  Michael Hj Maes; Drozdstoy Stoyanov
Journal:  World J Psychiatry       Date:  2022-05-19

2.  The interleukin-6/interleukin-23/T helper 17-axis as a driver of neuro-immune toxicity in the major neurocognitive psychosis or deficit schizophrenia: A precision nomothetic psychiatry analysis.

Authors:  Hussein Kadhem Al-Hakeim; Ali Fattah Al-Musawi; Abbas Al-Mulla; Arafat Hussein Al-Dujaili; Monojit Debnath; Michael Maes
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-10-18       Impact factor: 3.752

3.  False Dogmas in Schizophrenia Research: Toward the Reification of Pathway Phenotypes and Pathway Classes.

Authors:  Michael Maes; George Anderson
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2021-06-17       Impact factor: 4.157

4.  Precision Nomothetic Medicine in Depression Research: A New Depression Model, and New Endophenotype Classes and Pathway Phenotypes, and A Digital Self.

Authors:  Michael Maes
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2022-03-05
  4 in total

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