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Electrophysiological correlates of visual backward masking in patients with first episode psychosis

Authors :
Janir Nuno da Cruz
Michael H. Herzog
Ophélie Favrod
Patrícia Figueiredo
Andreas Brand
Mariam Okruashvili
Tinatin Gamkrelidze
Maya Roinishvili
Eka Chkonia
Albulena Shaqiri

Abstract

Visual backward masking is strongly impaired in patients with schizophrenia. Masking deficits have been proposed as potential endophenotypes of schizophrenia. Masking performance deficits manifest as strongly reduced amplitudes in the electroencephalogram (EEG). In order to fulfill the criteria of an endophenotype, masking deficits should not vary substantially across time and should be present at the first psychotic event. To verify whether these conditions are met for visual backward masking, we tested patients with first episode psychosis (n = 21) in a longitudinal study. Patients were tested with visual backward masking and EEG three times every six months over a period of one year. We found that the EEG amplitudes of patients with first episode psychosis were higher as compared to those of patients with schizophrenia but lower as compared to those of unaffected controls. More interestingly, we found that the EEG amplitudes of patients with first episode psychosis remained stable over the course of one year. Since chronic schizophrenia patients have strongly reduced amplitudes, we speculate that the neural correlates of masking deficits (EEG amplitudes) continue to decrease as the disease progresses.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b40d43db5aa2d8b21d8ff044420eacf3