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Childhood Cat Bites Relate to Increased Adulthood Severity of Schizotypy, Psychotic-Like Experiences, and Social Anhedonia in a Transdiagnostic Psychiatric Sample

机译:童年猫叮咬涉及到舍利特文,精神病的体验和社会厌氧在跨诊断精神症样本中增加的成年性严重程度

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Introduction: Previous research has linked childhood cat scratches and bites to an increased risk for depression, and childhood cat ownership to increased risk of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and social anhedonia. Our group previously reported that childhood cat bites, but not ownership, related to increased schizotypy severity in an undergraduate sample. Methods: The current study expands this research by inquiring about cat bites and ownership in a transdiagnostic adult sample (N = 162; 51% female; mean age = 38.15, SD = 10.65), composed of schizophrenia spectrum disorders (n = 30), bipolar disorders (n = 30), unipolar depression (n = 23), and nonpsychiatric participants (n = 79). Participants completed a diagnostic interview, scales of symptom severity, and a cat interaction history interview. Results: Across the entire sample, self-report of cat bites prior to age 13, but not after, related to greater current severity of overall schizotypy, self-reported and clinician-rated psychotic-like symptoms, and social anhedonia, when compared to individuals who reported no lifetime cat bites. Cat bites prior to age 13 did not relate to severity of depression, non-social anhedonia, or clinician-rated negative symptoms. Self-report of residing with a cat prior to age 13, or a first cat bite after age 12, did not relate to any symptom severity measure examined. Conclusions: One theory for these findings is that an unknown infectious agent common in cat saliva interacted with brain development in childhood to increase the likelihood of these symptoms. A novel theory for the infectious agent Pasteurella multocidais discussed. Future research can examine candidate infectious agents to identify potential causal mechanisms for these relationships.
机译:简介:以前的研究与童年猫划伤并咬伤抑郁症的风险增加,童年猫所有权增加了精神分裂症,双相情感障碍和社会安德尼亚的风险。我们的小组以前报告说,童年猫咬,但不是所有权,与本科样本中增加的斯派比严重程度增加。方法:目前的研究通过探究Transdiagnostic成人样品中的猫咬伤和所有权来扩展了这项研究(n = 162;平均年龄= 38.15,sd = 10.65),由精神分裂症谱系统组成(n = 30),双极性紊乱(n = 30),单极抑制(n = 23)和非血清学参与者(n = 79)。参与者完成了诊断面试,症状严重程度和猫互动历史访谈。结果:在整个样本中,13岁之前的猫咬伤的自我报告,但没有以后,与整体斯派比的更大的严重程度相关,自我报告和临床医生评级的精神病症状,以及社会厌氧的症状报告没有终身猫咬伤的人。 13岁之前的猫叮咬与抑郁症,非社会厌食症或临床医生的阴性症状的严重程度无关。在13岁之前居住在13岁之前的猫的自我报告或12岁以后的猫咬伤,没有涉及检查的任何症状严重程度措施。结论:这一发现的一个理论是,猫唾液中常见的一种未知传染病与童年中的脑部发育相互作用,以增加这些症状的可能性。讨论了传染病患者的新颖理论。未来的研究可以检查候选传染病,以确定这些关系的潜在因果机制。

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