Pathophysiology of ‘positive’ thought disorder in schizophrenia
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 173 (3) , 231-235
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.173.3.231
Abstract
Background: Formal thought disorder is a characteristic feature of psychosis, but little is known of its pathophysiology. We have investigated this in schizophrenia using positron emission tomography (PET).Method: Regional cerebral blood flow was measured using H215O and PET while six people with schizophrenia were describing a series of 12 ambiguous pictures which elicited different degrees of thought-disordered speech. In a within-subject design, the severity of positive thought disorder was correlated with cerebral blood flow across the 12 scans in each subject.Results: Verbal disorganisation (‘positive’ thought disorder) was inversely correlated with activity in the inferior frontal, cingulate and left superior temporal cortex, and positively correlated with activity in the parahippocampal/anterior fusiform region bilaterally, and in the body of the right caudate (P<0.001). The total amount of speech produced (independent of thought disorder) was positively correlated with activity in the left inferior frontal and left superior temporal cortex.Conclusions: The severity of positive thought disorder was inversely correlated with activity in areas implicated in the regulation and monitoring of speech production. Reduced activity in these regions may contribute to the articulation of the linguistic anomalies that characterise positive thought disorder. The positive correlations between positive thought disorder and parahippocampal/anterior fusiform activity may reflect this regions role in the processing of linguistic anomalies.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dementia: The Estimation of Premorbid Intelligence Levels Using the New Adult Reading TestPublished by Elsevier ,2013
- Grey matter correlates of syndromes in schizophreniaThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1997
- A Neural Dissociation within Language: Evidence that the Mental Dictionary Is Part of Declarative Memory, and that Grammatical Rules Are Processed by the Procedural SystemJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1997
- The Nottingham Acute Bed Study: Alternatives to acute psychiatric careThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1997
- Functional anatomy of a common semantic system for words and picturesNature, 1996
- Confabulation in schizophrenia: evidence of a new form?Psychological Medicine, 1996
- Contributions of anterior cingulate cortex to behaviourBrain, 1995
- Patterns of Cerebral Blood Flow in SchizophreniaThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1992
- Schizophrenic Syndromes and Frontal Lobe PerformanceThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1991
- Schizophrenic thought disorders and impaired perspective.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1980