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首页> 外文期刊>European neuropsychopharmacology: the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology >Moving forward: distinct sensorimotor abnormalities predict clinical outcome after 6 months in patients with schizophrenia
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Moving forward: distinct sensorimotor abnormalities predict clinical outcome after 6 months in patients with schizophrenia

机译:向前发展:不同的感觉运动异常预测精神分裂症患者6个月后的临床结果

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Despite substantial efforts in the last decades, objective measures that can predict clinical outcome in patients with schizophrenia (SZ) after an acute psychotic episode are still lacking. Here, we introduced a comprehensive assessment of sensorimotor function to predict midterm clinical outcome following an acute psychotic episode. This naturalistic follow-up of 43 patients with DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of SZ examined sensorimotor abnormalities (i.e. Neurological Soft Signs (NSS), parkinsonism, akathisia, catatonia and acute dyskinesia), psychopathology, cognition and psychosocial functioning using well-established instruments. A collection of statistical methods was used to examine the relationship between sensorimotor domain, psychopathology, cognition and psychosocial functioning. We also tested the clinical feasibility of this relationship when predicting clinical outcome after an acute psychotic episode. Longitudinal data were collected on 43 individuals after a follow-up period of >6 months. At follow-up, patients showed significantly reduced general symptom severity, as well as decreased levels of NSS, parkinsonism and catatonia. Further, NSS scores at baseline predicted PANSS negative scores and cognitive functioning at baseline. Finally, NSS scores at baseline predicted symptom change (reduction of PANSS positive and negative scores) at follow-up. In conclusion, our results suggest that NSS are significant predictors of poor clinical outcome in SZ at baseline and >6 months after an acute psychotic episode. These findings propose sensorimotor domain as state biomarker of SZ and support its predictive power with respect to treatment outcome. (c) 2020 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.
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