Volume 148, Issue 1 , Pages 23-31, 22 November 2006
Dysfunction of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in antipsychotic-naïve schizophreniform psychosis
Abstract
Reports of abnormal activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) are common in functional neuroimaging studies of schizophrenia, although very few have examined brain activity in patients close to the onset of illness. In this H215O PET study, eight young male patients with first-episode schizophreniform psychosis and age-matched control subjects performed a version of the Stroop task that we have previously shown to engage the middle-frontal gyrus. At the time of testing, patients were antipsychotic-naïve and were scanned within 1 week of initial contact with our clinical program. All patients received a later diagnosis of schizophrenia 6 months after participating in the study. Whole-brain (within-group) and region-of-interest (between-group) analyses were carried out and data underwent spatial reproducibility testing. Compared with healthy subjects, patients showed significantly greater reaction-time (RT) interference but normal RT accuracy on the Stroop task. This pattern correlated with significant under-activation of the posterior left middle-frontal gyri in the patient versus control group. These findings support an emerging model of impaired cognitive control in schizophrenia and suggest that there is significant dysfunction of the dlPFC close to the onset of illness that may coincide with, or be modulated by, the transition-to-illness phase.
Keywords: Schizophrenia, Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, Cognitive control, First-episode psychosis
To access this article, please choose from the options below
PII: S0925-4927(06)00043-6
doi:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2006.02.006
© 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Volume 148, Issue 1 , Pages 23-31, 22 November 2006
