Sensorimotor Transformation Deficits for Smooth Pursuit in First-Episode Affective Psychoses and Schizophrenia
Autor: | James L. Reilly, Rebekka Lencer, John A. Sweeney, Andreas Sprenger, Margret S.H. Harris, Matcheri S. Keshavan |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Affective Disorders Psychotic Male medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent genetic structures Motion Perception Neuropsychological Tests Audiology Article Smooth pursuit Ocular Motility Disorders Young Adult Basal ganglia Reaction Time medicine Humans Motion perception Bipolar disorder Biological Psychiatry Depression (differential diagnoses) Psychiatric Status Rating Scales First episode medicine.disease Pursuit Smooth Schizophrenia Case-Control Studies Female Visual Fields Psychology Neuroscience Photic Stimulation Psychomotor Performance Antipsychotic Agents Follow-Up Studies |
Zdroj: | Biological Psychiatry. 67:217-223 |
ISSN: | 0006-3223 |
Popis: | Background Smooth pursuit deficits are an intermediate phenotype for schizophrenia that may result from disturbances in visual motion perception, sensorimotor transformation, predictive mechanisms, or alterations in basic oculomotor control. Which of these components are the primary causes of smooth pursuit impairments and whether they are impaired similarly across psychotic disorders remain to be established. Methods First-episode psychotic patients with bipolar disorder ( n = 34), unipolar depression ( n = 24), or schizophrenia ( n = 77) and matched healthy participants ( n = 130) performed three smooth pursuit tasks designed to evaluate different components of pursuit tracking. Results On ramp tasks, maintenance pursuit velocity was reduced in all three patients groups with psychotic bipolar patients exhibiting the most severe impairments. Open loop pursuit velocity was reduced in psychotic bipolar and schizophrenia patients. Motion perception during pursuit initiation, as indicated by the accuracy of saccades to moving targets, was not impaired in any patient group. Analyses in 138 participants followed for 6 weeks, during which patients were treated and psychotic symptom severity decreased, and no significant change in performance in any group was revealed. Conclusions Sensorimotor transformation deficits in all patient groups suggest a common alteration in frontostriatal networks that dynamically regulate gain control of pursuit responses using sensory input and feedback about performance. Predictive mechanisms appear to be sufficiently intact to compensate for this deficit across psychotic disorders. The absence of significant changes after acute treatment and symptom reduction suggests that these deficits appear to be stable over time. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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