Volume 50, Issue 1 pp. 39-46
Article

Schneiderian first rank symptoms in schizophrenia: A developmental neuroscience evaluation

Sai Krishna Tikka

Corresponding Author

Sai Krishna Tikka

KS Mani Center for Cognitive Neurosciences and Department of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Kanke, Ranchi, 834006 Jharkhand, India

Corresponding author.

E-mail address: [email protected] (S.K. Tikka).

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S.Haque Nizamie

S.Haque Nizamie

KS Mani Center for Cognitive Neurosciences and Department of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Kanke, Ranchi, 834006 Jharkhand, India

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Archana Kumari Das

Archana Kumari Das

KS Mani Center for Cognitive Neurosciences and Department of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Kanke, Ranchi, 834006 Jharkhand, India

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Nidhi Agarwal

Nidhi Agarwal

KS Mani Center for Cognitive Neurosciences and Department of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Kanke, Ranchi, 834006 Jharkhand, India

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Nishant Goyal

Nishant Goyal

KS Mani Center for Cognitive Neurosciences and Department of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Psychiatry, Kanke, Ranchi, 834006 Jharkhand, India

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First published: 04 March 2016
Citations: 5

Abstract

Introduction

Self disorders in schizophrenia have been suggested to have distinct neurobiological underpinnings. Using comprehensive neuro-scientific assessments including a neurophysiological, a neurochemical and a neuropsychological marker, this study assesses disordered-“self” in schizophrenia.

Methods

Twenty schizophrenia patients with first rank symptoms (FRS;FRS+), 20 patients without FRS (FRS−) and 20 healthy controls (HC) were assessed for psychopathology, especially on specially designed FRS score sheets with a narrow and a broad definition. Resting state electroencephalography was acquired using 256-electrodes; gamma spectral-power was measured in 8 regions of interest. Serum BDNF and self-monitoring were also assessed. Comparative and correlation analysis were conducted in addition to a step-wise discriminant function analysis.

Results

FRS+ group with greater positive symptom score and a lower negative symptom score, showed significantly increased gamma spectral power, especially on right hemispheric regions, along with lower BDNF levels and lower scores on self-monitoring compared to FRS− and HC. Serum BDNF levels and gamma spectral power in the region corresponding right inferior parietal lobule were identified as predictors that most accurately classified the defined groups.

Conclusions

Schizophrenia patients satisfying the criteria of presence of first rank symptoms represent a distinct neurodevelopmental subgroup with associated features of predominantly positive symptoms, significantly lower neurotrophin levels, aberrant resting state brain activity in the heteromodal association cortex and performing poorer on self-monitoring tasks.

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