• Investigation
People with psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia often have cognitive difficulties, including problems with care, concentration and memory. These cognitive difficulties are often early symptoms that occur before the initiation of psychosis. In a study funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the researchers found consistent ties between brain connectivity and cognitive function in people with early stage psychosis and people with high risk who later developed psychosis. This discovery could help researchers and clinicians better understand the factors that lead to psychosis, informing the previous intervention and improved treatments.
What did the researchers see in the study?
Researchers Heather Burrell Ward, MD (Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Roscoe Brady, Jr., MD, Ph.D. (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Kathryn Eve Lewandowski, Ph.D. (McLean Hospital) and his colleagues examined data from two large multiple studies. The work-the work of the Human Association for Early Psychosis (HCP-EP) and North America Prodrome Enfromedinal Study 2 (NAPLS2)-include early psychosis or high risk of psychosis, as well as healthy participants.
The research team conducted a comprehensive analysis of the participants or Connectome neuronal connections to identify strong correlations between brain connectivity and attention. Caution was measured using an acoustic work that was developed specifically to evaluate constant attention to people with a risk of psychotic disorders. The work mitigates three aspects of attention: vigilance, memory and interference management ability.
Overall, the researchers analyzed data from 96 HCP-EP participants with early psychosis and 213 Napls2 participants at high risk for psychosis.
What did the study find?
Overall, psychosis participants or an increased risk of psychosis are worse off in the work of attention by their peers who are not at risk of psychosis.
Data from early psychosis participants revealed correlations between brain connectivity and their attention, according to the researchers’ case. Specifically, the lower connectivity between an area in the Middle Ages and an area in the bodybuilding cortex was associated with worse performance in attention. The researchers have found a similar connectivity-knowledge correlation among participants, who are at increased risk-and eventually developed-.
Data from the two studies did not show connections of connection-know-how for high-risk participants who did not develop psychosis or for participants who were not in danger for psychosis.
What do the results mean?
These consistent bonds between brain connectivity and knowledge show specific brain circuits that can contribute to cognitive difficulties in people with psychotic disorders, even before psychosis develops. However, these links do not provide evidence of a causal relationship. Researchers suggest that experimental studies using non -invasive brain stimulation techniques could help determine whether the changes to these brain circuits directly affect cognitive performance. If so, these circuits can serve as special targets for therapeutic intervention.
Ward, Brady, Lewandowski and his colleagues note that recruitment participants are a special challenge in the field of research, demanding significant time, effort and resources. Only a small percentage of people at risk of psychosis eventually develop psychosis and participants are often difficult to detect. According to the researchers, these findings emphasize how valuable large multi-site studies such as HCP-EP and Napls2 are improving the understanding of the factors that provide and contribute to psychosis.
Reference
Ward, Hb, Beermann, A., Xie, J., Yildiz, G., Manzanarez Felix, K., Addington, J., Bearden, Ce, Cadenhead, K., Cannon, TD, Cornblatt, B., Keshavan, M., Matharon, D., Perkins, Do, Seidman, L. MJ, … Brady, Ro, Jr. (2024). The powerful brain is associated with cognitive performance in the psychosis and its forerunner. Biological psychiatry; 97(2), 139-147. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2024.07.012
Grants
MH066134 ; MH066286 ; MH120588-01A1 ; MH081902 ; MH081857 ; MH117012 ; MH109977 ; MH082022 ; MH081944 ; MH066069 ; MH076989 ; MH081928 ; MH081988 ; MH116170