Read Secondary Schizophrenia Online
Authors: Perminder S. Sachdev
378
:176–9.
schizophrenia.
Neuropsychopharmacology, 2006.
thalamic D2/3 receptor binding in
161. Suzuki M., Yuasa S., Minabe Y., et
31
:221–30.
drug-na¨ıve patients with
al. Left superior temporal blood
schizophrenia: a PET study with
flow increases in schizophrenic
169. Leitman D. I., Hoptman M. J.,
[11C]FLB 457. Int J
and schizophreniform patients
Foxe J. J.,
et al.
The neural
Neuropsychopharmacol, 2003.
with auditory hallucinations: a
substrates of impaired prosodic
6
:261–370.
longitudinal case study using
detection in schizophrenia and its
178. Tavlik M., Nordström A. L.,
123I-IMP SPECT. Eur Arch
sensorial antecedents. Am J
Okubo Y.,
et al.
Dopamine D2
Psychiatr Clin Neurosci, 1993.
Psychiatry, 2007.
164
:474–82.
receptor binding in drug-na¨ıve
242
:257–61.
170. Allen P., Amaro E., Fu C. H.,
et al.
patients with schizophrenia
162. Lawrie S. M., Buechel C., Whalley
Neural correlates of the
examined with raclopride-C11
H. C.,
et al.
Reduced
misattribution of speech in
and positron emission
frontotemporal functional
schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry,
tomography. Psychiatry Res, 2006.
connectivity in schizophrenia
2007.
190
:162–9.
148
:165–73.
associated with auditory
171. Mechelli A., Allen P., Amaro E. Jr.,
179. Suhara T., Okubo Y., Yasuno F., et
hallucinations. Biol Psychiatry,
et al.
Misattribution of speech and
al. Decreased dopamine D2
2002.
51
:1008–11.
impaired connectivity in patients
receptor binding in anterior
163. Sanjuan J., Lull J. J., Aguilar E. J.,
with auditory verbal
cingulate cortex in schizophrenia.
et al.
Emotional words induce
hallucinations. Hum Brain Mapp,
Arch Gen Psychiatry, 2002.
enhanced brain activity in
2007.
28
:1213–22.
59
:25–30.
schizophrenic patients with
172. Taylor S. F., Welsh R. C., Chen A.
180. Glenthoj B. Y., Mackeprang T.,
auditory hallucinations.
C.,
et al.
Medial frontal
Svarer C.,
et al.
Frontal dopamine
Psychiatry Res, 2007.
154
:21–9.
hyperactivity in reality distortion.
D(2/3) receptor binding in
164. Oertel V., Rotarska-Jagiela A., van
Biol Psychiatry, 2007.
61
:
drug-naive first-episode
de Ven V. G.,
et al.
Visual
1171–8.
schizophrenic patients correlates
hallucinations in schizophrenia
173. Williams L. M., Das P., Liddel B.
with positive psychotic symptoms
investigated with functional
J.,
et al.
Fronto-limbic and
and gender. Biol Psychiatry, 2006.
74
magnetic resonance imaging.
autonomic disjunctions to
60
:621–9.
Chapter 5 – Functional neuroimaging in schizophrenia
181. Frankle W. G., Lombardo I.,
and [11C]WAY-100635. Arch
(Eds.). New York: Academic Press,
Kegeles L. S.,
et al.
Serotonin 1A
Gen Psychiatry, 2002.
59
:514–
pp. 101–14.
receptor availability in patients
20.
185. Shi F., Liu Y., Jiang T.,
et al.
with schizophrenia and
183. Iwabuchi J., Ito C., Tashiro M.,
Regional homogeneity and
schizo-affective disorder: a
et al.
Histamine H1 receptors in
anatomical parcellation for fMRI
positron emission tomography
schizophrenic patients measured
image classification: application to
imaging study with [11C]WAY
by positron emission tomography.
schizophrenia and normal
100635. Psychopharmacology
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol, 2005.
controls. Med Image Comput,
(Berl), 2006.
189
:155–
15
:185–91.
2007.
10
:136–43.
64.
184. Bartels P., Subach J. (1976).
186. Buchsbaum M. S., Haznedar M.
182. Tauscher J., Kapur S., Verhoeff N.
Significance probability mappings
M., Aronowitz J.,
et al.
FDG-PET
P.,
et al.
Brain serotonin
and automated interpretation of
in never-previously medicated
5-HT(1A) receptor binding in
complex pictorial scenes. In
psychotic adolescents treated with
schizophrenia measured by
Digital Processing of Biomedical
olanzapine or haloperidol.
positron emission tomography
Imagery, Preston E. and Onoe M.
Schizophr Res, 2007.
94
:293–305.
75
Section
Organic syndromes of schizophrenia
3
Section 3
Organic syndromes of schizophrenia: epilepsy and schizophrenia
Perminder S. Sachdev
Facts box
higher in epileptic patients than in the
r
There is evidence from epidemiological as
general population.
well as clinical data that schizophrenia-like
r
It is often noted that patients who develop
psychosis is more common in patients with
psychosis have a severe form of epilepsy
epilepsy and vice versa.
involving multiple seizure types, a history of
r
Psychoses associated with epilepsy have been
status epilepticus, and resistance to drug
traditionally categorized into ictal, postictal,
treatment.
and interictal. The interictal psychoses may
r
Suggestions that psychosis in epilepsy might
be brief or chronic in duration.
be exclusively or preferentially associated
r
Ictal psychosis is generally either a partial
with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) are
complex (psychomotor) status or a petit mal
supported by a majority of case studies. The
status.
evidence also points to a mediobasal rather
r
Postictal psychosis begins a few hours to a
than neocortical temporal lobe abnormality
few days following a flurry (usually) of
underpinning psychosis when the focus is in
seizures and has plaeomorphic
the temporal lobes.
symptomatology, a short duration, and often
r
The laterality issue remains undecided, but
settles spontaneously.
the importance of a left-sided focus is not
r
Brief interictal psychosis has usually been
striking.
referred to as “alternating psychosis,”
r
Schizophrenia-like psychosis may develop de
suggesting that the psychosis and seizures are
novo many months or years after temporal
antithetical; when psychosis is present,
lobectomy for the treatment of intractable
seizures are usually in abeyance.
epilepsy.
r
Alternating psychosis has been associated
r
Discussion of pathogenesis of chronic
with the concept of Forced Normalization of
psychosis has centered broadly on two
EEG (electroencephalograph).
mechanisms: 1) the psychosis is due to the
r
Brief psychosis has been reported in relation
repeated electrical discharges, either directly
to the use of antiepileptic drugs.
or through the development of
Antipsychotics, on the other hand, lower the
neurophysiological or neurochemical
threshold for epileptic seizures.
abnormalities; or 2) the epilepsy and
r
Postictal and brief interictal psychoses share
psychosis share a common neuropathology
clinical features and may have similar
that may be localized (emphasis on
pathogenetic mechanisms. Bimodal
temporal lobe but also frontal lobe and the
psychosis has been described in some
cerebellum) or widespread in the brain. A
patients.
synthesis of these two mechanisms may be
r
possible.
The overall evidence suggests that chronic
schizophrenia-like psychosis is many times
79
Organic Syndromes of Schizophrenia – Section 3
The association between epilepsy and schizophrenia
of an underlying cortical neuronal abnormality that
has attracted the attention of psychiatrists since the
transiently leads to an electrical discharge in the brain.
nineteenth century
[1].
This clinically observed asso-The cause of this could be a brain malformation, an
ciation was seen as a basis for exploration of the patho-altered metabolic state, a traumatic lesion, and so on.
genesis of mental illness, with epilepsy-related psy-It is therefore appropriate to refer to the “epilepsies”
chosis as a possible model of schizophrenia. It was
rather than one disease. The relative proportion of
this relationship that prompted the exploration of con-different types of epilepsies is difficult to determine.
vulsive therapy in the treatment of psychiatric disor-For example, estimates of the proportion of epilepsy
ders. The proconvulsant nature of neuroleptic drugs
patients who have a temporal lobe focus vary from
and the occurrence of psychosis with anticonvulsants
30% to as much as 76%
[7],
and studies have dif-have further fueled the interest. We have come a con-fered in the rigor with which a temporal lobe onset
siderable distance since the first efforts of understand-was investigated. This has direct relevance to the ques-ing this association, but many aspects of this relation-tion of whether psychosis has a special relationship
ship still remain controversial
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6].
This
with TLE. The diagnosis of schizophrenia poses even
greater problems. For example, the six-month crite-ship and attempts to synthesize the understanding that
rion for schizophrenia used in the Diagnostic and Sta-emerges from its examination.
tistical Manual of Mental Disorders-III (DSM-III) and
subsequent classifications had a major impact on the
Introductory caveats
prevalence rates for this disorder, with implications for
associations based on previous epidemiological data.
Any examination of the association must contend with
In examining the association, therefore, the character-a number of limitations in the literature, conceptual as
istics of the “schizophrenia” being referred to must be
well as empirical. Some of these limitations are elabo-closely examined.
rated first.
Problems with definitions
The problem of superficial similarity
Although the definition of epilepsy has been consis-A considerable proportion of the discussion on this
tent, the definitions of “psychosis” and “schizophrenia”
topic has been influenced by the similarity between
used in studies have lacked standardization. Clearly,
temporal lobe phenomena and psychotic symptoms.
the significance of a confusional postictal psychosis is
Auditory hallucinations, depersonalization, altered
different from that of a postictal manic psychosis or
bodily experiences, labile emotions, and so on are fea-an interictal schizophreniform psychosis. This prob-tures common to both disorders. This does not neces-lem has been particularly salient in the literature on
sarily imply a common origin for the two sets of symp-psychosis following the use of anticonvulsant drugs.
toms. Similar brain phenomena may be produced by
In this chapter, I restrict myself to the examina-pathology in different brain regions
[8]
. This is because
tion of psychoses that phenomenologically resemble a
the brain is massively interconnected, and there are
schizophreniform illness, in which thought and per-proximal as well as remote effects of lesions or mal-ceptual disturbances, usually in the form of delusions
function.