Cerebral lateralization is delayed in children who later develop schizophrenia

Crow, T.J., Done, D.J. and Sacker, A. (1996) Cerebral lateralization is delayed in children who later develop schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research (3). pp. 181-185. ISSN 0920-9964
Copy

The origins of schizophrenia are obscure. One suggestion is that it represents a component of the genetic variation associated with the establishment of dominance in one or other cerebral hemisphere, a mechanism that has been crucial in the evolution of language. Indices of cerebral hemispheric dominance (hand, foot and eye preference, speed of checking squares) recorded on the I6 980 children in the UK National Child Development Study cohort were examined in relation to psychiatric admission by the age of 28 years. Diagnoses were established by the application of Present State Examination criteria to case notes. Pre-schizophrenic children (n = 34−36) were more likely (p < 0.0003) to be rated by their mothers as ambidextrous at the age of 7 years, and at 11 years were less (p < 0.01) strongly right-handed than their peers in the cohort population on a test of relative hand skill: children who later developed affective psychosis (n=25) or neurosis (n=60) did not differ significantly from controls. Delay in establishing dominance in one hemisphere could be the critical factor that predisposes to schizophrenia.

Full text not available from this repository.

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span MODS METS Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject HTML Citation ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads