Researchers identify brain abnormalities
in children at high risk for schizophrenia shortly after birth
In a paper published online by the American Journal of
Psychiatry, researchers at the provide the first evidence that brain abnormalities
associated with schizophrenia risk are detectable in babies only a few weeks old.
"It allows us to start thinking about how we can identify kids at risk
for schizophrenia very early and whether there things that we can do very early
on to lessen the risk," said lead study author John H. Gilmore, M.D., professor
of psychiatry and director of the Schizophrenia Research Center at the University
of North Carolina.
The scientists used ultrasound and MRI to examine brain development in 26 babies
born to mothers with schizophrenia. Having a first-degree relative with the disease
raises a person's risk of schizophrenia to one in 10. Among boys, the high-risk
babies had larger brains and larger lateral ventricles than babies of mothers
with no psychiatric illness.
"Could it be that enlargement is an early marker of a brain that's going
to be different?" Gilmore speculated. Larger brain size in infants is also
associated with autism.
The researchers found no difference in brain size among girls in the study.
This fits the overall pattern of schizophrenia, which is more common, and often
more severe, in males.
The findings do not necessarily mean the boys with larger brains will develop
schizophrenia. Relatives of people with schizophrenia sometimes have subtle brain
abnormalities but exhibit few or no symptoms.
"This is just the very beginning," said Gilmore. "We're following
these children through childhood." The team will continue to measure the
children's brains and will also track their language skills, motor skills and
memory development. They will also continue to recruit women to the study to increase
the sample size.
This research provides the first indication that brain abnormalities associated
with schizophrenia can be detected early in life. Improving early detection could
allow doctors to develop new approaches to prevent high-risk children from developing
the disease. "The research will give us a better sense of when brain development
becomes different," said Gilmore. "And that will help us target interventions."
The paper is available now online and will be published in the September issue
of the journal. The study was funded by grants from the National Institute of
Mental Health and the Foundation of Hope.
In addition to Gilmore, authors of the study were Chaeryon Kang, Dianne D.
Evans, Honor M. Wolfe, J. Keith Smith, Weili Lin, Robert M. Hamer, Martin Styner,
and Guido Gerig. Author Jeffrey A. Lieberman, chairs the Department of Psychiatry
at Columbia University.
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