| Literature DB >> 35273531 |
Junwei Yan1,2,3,4, Yuanyuan Chen1,2,3,4, Peijun Ju5,6,7, Jianliang Gao1,2,3,4, Loufeng Zhang1,2,3,4, Jingwei Li1,2,3,4, Keming Wang1,2,3,4, Jie Zhang1,2,3,4, Chao Li1,2,3,4, Qingrong Xia1,2,3,4, Cuizhen Zhu1,2,3,4, Xulai Zhang1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors such as dyslipidemia and systemic aberrant inflammatory processes may occur in patients with psychotic disorders, which may cause increased mortality. The interplay between immune and metabolic markers and its contribution to the clinical symptoms of schizophrenia (SCZ) remain unclear. This study aimed to examine the association of a series of inflammatory factors, plasma biochemical indicators, and SCZ clinical symptomatology with the severity of SCZ symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: biochemical index; cardiovascular risk factors; electrochemiluminescent immunoassay; inflammation cytokine; schizophrenia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35273531 PMCID: PMC8901486 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.834539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Comparison of demographic and clinical data between controls and first-episode drug naïve patients with SCZ.
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| Sex (female/male) | 22/14 | 54/25 | 0.579 (0.447) |
| Age (years) | 28.11 ± 5.16 | 34.39 ± 11.85 | 3.045 (0.003) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 22.60 ± 2.96 | 23.46 ± 4.25 | 1.101 (0.273) |
| BPRS | - | 48.70 ± 9.55 | - |
| Anxiety depression | - | 5.51 ± 2.03 | - |
| Thought disturbance | - | 11.05 ± 2.88 | - |
| Anergia | - | 9.91 ± 2.83 | - |
| Activation | - | 4.73 ± 2.13 | - |
| Hostile suspiciousness | - | 9.28 ± 3.32 | - |
| PANSS | - | 86.91 ± 16.63 | - |
| Positive symptom | - | 11.73 ± 3.82 | - |
| Negative symptom | - | 20.20 ± 6.27 | - |
| Cognitive defect | - | 9.89 ± 2.97 | - |
| Excited symptom | - | 11.69 ± 3.95 | - |
| Depressive symptom | - | 4.05 ± 1.39 | - |
BMI, Body mass index; BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; SCZ, schizophrenia.
Figure 1Comparison of blood routine, biochemical factors, and inflammation cytokines concentrations in first episode drug naive patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls. Hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), red blood cell count, high-density lipoprotein, total bile acid, total protein, albumin, apolipoprotein A1, blood urea nitrogen, kalium, and IL-7 were lower in the case group than in healthy controls [(A–C,F–L,S) p < 0.05, respectively]. While white blood cell count, neutrophil count and natrium, CRP, IL-8, IL-16, IL-6, IL-13, IL-10, and IL-15 were higher in case group than in healthy controls [(D,E,M–R,T,U) p < 0.05, respectively]. The false discovery rate (FDR) method is used to adjust the p-value. *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001, ****p ≤ 0.0001.
Figure 2Correlations heatmap of blood routine, biochemical, and inflammation cytokines with clinical symptom. There are six indexes had significantly positively and negatively connection with clinical indicators of BPRS, including red blood cell count, blood urea nitrogen, total bile acid, IL-8, Natrium, and High-density lipoprotein. There are three indexes had significantly positively and negatively connection with clinical indicators of PANSS. BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale.
Figure 3The correlation network between blood routine, biochemical, and inflammatory factors and total and subscale scores of Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS). (A) The natrium and red blood cell count had the highest degree of correlation with the BPRS (degree = 4). (B) The high-density lipoprotein had the highest degree of correlation with the PANSS (degree = 4).
Figure 4ROC curve analysis of blood routine, biochemical, and inflammation cytokines between first episode drug-naïve schizophrenia patients and healthy controls (A–F). 95% CI, 95% confidence interval.