| Literature DB >> 32662507 |
Derek J Dean1, Jessica A Bernard2,3, Katherine S F Damme4, Randall O'Reilly5, Joseph M Orr2,3, Vijay A Mittal4,6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Motor dysfunction in youth at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis is thought to reflect abnormal neurodevelopment within cortical-subcortical motor circuits and may be important for understanding clinical trajectories of CHR individuals. However, to date, our perspective of brain-behavior relationships has been informed solely by cross-sectional correlational studies linking behavior in the lab to brain structure or respective resting-state network connectivity. Here, we assess movement dysfunction from 2 perspectives: study 1 investigates the longitudinal progression of handwriting variability and positive symptoms in a sample of 91 CHR and healthy controls during a 12-month follow-up and study 2 involves a multiband functional magnetic resonance imaging task exploring the relationship between power grip force stability and motor network brain activation in a subset of participants. In study 1, we found that greater handwriting variability was a stable feature of CHR participants who experienced worse symptom progression. Study 2 results showed that CHR individuals had greater variability in their grip force and greater variability was related to decreased activation in the associative cortico-striatal network compared to controls. Motor variability may be a stable marker of vulnerability for psychosis risk and possible indicator of a vulnerable cortico-striatal brain network functioning in CHR participants, although the effects of antipsychotic medication should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: clinical high risk; functional magnetic resonance imaging; handwriting; longitudinal; motor control; power grip; variability
Year: 2020 PMID: 32662507 PMCID: PMC7707079 DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbaa072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Bull ISSN: 0586-7614 Impact factor: 9.306