Absence of neurodegeneration and neural injury in the cerebral cortex in a sample of elderly patients with schizophrenia |
Author(s):
, , , ,Journal/Book: Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1998; 55: 515 N State St, Chicago, IL 60610. Amer Medical Assoc. 225-232.
Abstract: Background: The cognitive and functional deterioration that is observed in many ''poor-outcome'' patients with schizophrenia suggests a neurodegenerative process extending into late life. Previous diagnostic studies have excluded known neurodegenerative diseases as explanations for this dementia. However, we hypothesized that relatively small accumulations of age-or disease-related neurodegenerative lesions occurring in an otherwise abnormal brain could result in deterioration in schizophrenia. Methods: Postmortem studies were conducted using 23 prospectively accrued elderly persons with chronic schizophrenia for whom clinical ratings had been determined before death, 14 elderly control patients with no neuropsychiatric disease, and 10 control patients with Alzheimer disease. Immunohistochemistry and unbiased stereological counting methods were used to quantify common neurodegenerative lesions (ie, neurofibrillary tangles, amyloid plaques, and Lewy bodies) and cellular reactions to a variety of noxious stimuli (ubiquitinated dystrophic neurites, astrocytosis, and microglial infiltrates) in the ventromedial temporal lobe and the frontal and the calcarine (primary visual) cortices. Results: No statistically significant differences were found between the patients with schizophrenia and the control patients without neuropsychiatric disease for the densities of any of the markers, while both groups exhibited fewer lesions than did the control group with Alzheimer disease. Correlation analyses in the schizophrenia sample failed to identify significant correlations between cognitive and psychiatric ratings and densities of any of the neuropathologic markers. Conclusions: No significant evidence of neurodegeneration or ongoing neural injury in the cerebral cortex was found in this sample of elderly persons with schizophrenia. Furthermore, the behavioral and cognitive deterioration observed in late life did not correlate with age-related degenerative phenomena.
Note: Article Arnold SE, Univ Penn, Ctr Neurobiol & Behav, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, 142 Clin Res Bldg, 415 Curie Blvd, Philadelphia,PA 19104 USA
Keyword(s): ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; ENTORHINAL CORTEX; PROTEIN; NEUROPATHOLOGY; GLIOSIS; BRAIN; NEUROFILAMENT; INTERLEUKIN-2; EXPRESSION
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