精神分裂症的大脑不对称。

Q2 Medicine
Francesca Martini, Marco Spangaro, Jacopo Sapienza, Roberto Cavallaro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从历史上看,首次观察到精神分裂症患者中右撇子患病率较低,导致了大脑不对称可能在疾病的发病机制中起重要作用的假设。在过去的几十年里,通过许多不同的技术如EEG、MEG、MRI和fMRI获得的越来越多的发现,一致地报道了大脑不对称的减少/丧失是精神分裂症的核心特征,进一步表明这种改变在疾病的发病机制中起着重要作用。此外,一些认知和精神病理维度显示出与不对称程度降低的显著相关性。特别是,在与语言相关的大脑中,如Sylvian裂缝和颞平面,结构不对称的缺失甚至逆转已经被记录在案。这些发现在进化和精神病理学的框架内被重新处理,指出不对称的丧失和随之而来的语言障碍是精神分裂症发病机制的首要因素。总的来说,尽管越来越多的证据表明精神分裂症具有异质性和多方面的发病机制,但大脑不对称的“旧概念”仍然为处理精神分裂症的临床医生和研究人员提供了有趣的提示和发人深省的元素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cerebral asymmetries in schizophrenia.

Historically, the first observations of a lower prevalence of right-handed patients among subjects with schizophrenia led to the hypothesis that brain asymmetry could play a significant role in the etiopathogenesis of the disease. Over the last decades, a growing number of findings obtained through many different techniques such as EEG, MEG, MRI, and fMRI, consistently reported reduction/loss of brain asymmetries as a core feature of schizophrenia, further suggesting such alterations to play a cardinal role in the pathogenesis of the disease. Moreover, several cognitive and psychopathologic dimensions have shown significant correlations with the reduced degree of asymmetry. In particular, the absence or even reversal of structural asymmetries has been documented in language-related brain such as the Sylvian fissure and planum temporale. These findings have been reprocessed within an evolutionary and psychopathologic framework pointing at the loss of asymmetry and the consequent language impairment as primum moves in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. Overall, despite growing evidence demonstrating a heterogeneous and multifaced etiopathogenesis in schizophrenia, the "old concept" of brain asymmetry still offers intriguing hints and thought-provoking elements for clinicians and researchers who deal with schizophrenia.

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来源期刊
Handbook of clinical neurology
Handbook of clinical neurology Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
302
期刊介绍: The Handbook of Clinical Neurology (HCN) was originally conceived and edited by Pierre Vinken and George Bruyn as a prestigious, multivolume reference work that would cover all the disorders encountered by clinicians and researchers engaged in neurology and allied fields. The first series of the Handbook (Volumes 1-44) was published between 1968 and 1982 and was followed by a second series (Volumes 45-78), guided by the same editors, which concluded in 2002. By that time, the Handbook had come to represent one of the largest scientific works ever published. In 2002, Professors Michael J. Aminoff, François Boller, and Dick F. Swaab took on the responsibility of supervising the third (current) series, the first volumes of which published in 2003. They have designed this series to encompass both clinical neurology and also the basic and clinical neurosciences that are its underpinning. Given the enormity and complexity of the accumulating literature, it is almost impossible to keep abreast of developments in the field, thus providing the raison d''être for the series. The series will thus appeal to clinicians and investigators alike, providing to each an added dimension. Now, more than 140 volumes after it began, the Handbook of Clinical Neurology series has an unparalleled reputation for providing the latest information on fundamental research on the operation of the nervous system in health and disease, comprehensive clinical information on neurological and related disorders, and up-to-date treatment protocols.
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