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spiritual_emergency
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Default Feb 19, 2007 at 04:19 PM
 

Cause: Brain Trauma

... Malaspina and her colleagues zeroed in on some 600 individuals who had at least two first-degree relatives with schizophrenia, that is, they were persons who were presumably at genetic risk of schizophrenia. In fact, some of the study subjects had schizophrenia themselves. Data about these subjects had been collected as part of the National Institute of Mental Health Genetics Initiative for Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders—a cooperative project involving six university sites. Malaspina and her team then used the data that had been collected to see whether they could find any link between brain injury and schizophrenia. They could, they report.

For example, when they compared the rates of brain injury for subjects who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia with those who had not, they found a threefold increase in head-injury rates among those with schizophrenia.

One might ask, of course, whether the link between head injury and schizophrenia was due to schizophrenia’s causing head injury, not the other way around. Malaspina and her colleagues do not believe, however, that this was the case.

One reason, she explained to Psychiatric News, is that whereas the analysis included head injuries both before and after schizophrenia, "if you restricted it to head injuries before illness, you saw the same thing. Head injury before illness increased the risk."

Another reason Malaspina and her coworkers believe that head injury is a risk factor for schizophrenia is that they not only analyzed data from the approximately 600 subjects who were part of the schizophrenia pedigree group, but also compared those data with data from some 1,300 persons who had at least two first-degree relatives with bipolar disorder and who were thus presumably at genetic risk for that disorder. When the researchers compared the rate of brain injury in the schizophrenia pedigree with that in the bipolar group, they found that the rate was significantly higher in the former. In the researchers’ view, this finding implies that a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia may also be capable of predisposing a person to head injury.

But how might a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia open a person to risk of head injury? Malaspina and her team offered a possible explanation: "Schizophrenia genes may increase exposure to head trauma, with head trauma further increasing the risk for schizophrenia."

And how might schizophrenia genes increase exposure to head trauma? Malaspina and her colleagues proffer a possible explanation here as well: Schizophrenia genes could code for difficulty paying attention, and inattention in turn could open a person to accidents and head injury. Indeed, difficulty paying attention has long been noted as one of the symptoms of schizophrenia. In fact, it may be not only a vulnerability factor for schizophrenia, but also one of the earliest indicators of the disease ...

Read the full article here: <a href=http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/36/7/37</a>Head Injury May Tip Schizophrenia Scales</a>



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