Brain Functions Underlying Visuospatial Attention Deficits in Schizophrenia



Status:Completed
Conditions:Schizophrenia, Psychiatric
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 55
Updated:4/17/2018
Start Date:July 3, 2011
End Date:December 24, 2014

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Default Network Dysfunction Underlying Visuospatial Attention Deficits in Schizophrenia

Background:

- A special brain circuit is important for helping us keeping an eye open for things that are
going on around us, even when we are not directly paying attention to them. This circuit
seems to work differently in people with schizophrenia than in other people, which may
explain specific deficits with broad monitoring observed in people with schizophrenia.
Researchers want to compare brain function in people with schizophrenia and healthy
volunteers to find out more about how these brain circuits work and affect attention.

Objectives:

- To study how the brain performs broad visual monitoring in people with schizophrenia.

Eligibility:

- Individuals between 18 to 55 years of age who have been diagnosed with schizophrenia.

- Healthy volunteers between 18 and 55.

Design:

- Participants will be screened with physical and psychological exams. They will have a
medical history. Tests for drug and alcohol use will also be done.

- Participants will have two study visits. The first is a training visit and the second is
a scanning visit.

- At the training visit, participants will practice computer-based tests of focus, memory,
and concentration. They will also answer questions about mood, psychiatric symptoms, and
smoking habits.

- At the scanning visit, participants will perform the computer-based tasks that they
practiced at the training visit. They will have magnetic resonance imaging while they
perform these tasks.

Objective: To test a neural circuit explanation for a visuospatial attention abnormality seen
in schizophrenia. Specifically, the aim is to test whether broad monitoring deficits may be
based on a disruption of the so-called sentinel function of the default network. Because the
default network is modulated by nicotinic compounds, such finding would implicate a possible
remediation strategy.

Study population: 24 people with schizophrenia, 24 matched healthy control subjects.

Design: A group comparison of attention task performance and associated brain activity as
measured by functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Outcome measures: Measures of attention task performance (reaction time, accuracy), BOLD
signal within regions of the default network, degree of temporal association of BOLD signal
with trial-by-trial reaction time.

- INCLUSION CRITERIA:

All participants:

1. Age 18 through 55.

2. Normal or corrected to normal visual acuity (at least 20/80)

Participants with menat illness:

3. DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder

4. Ability to give written informed consent

5. Four week of stable pharmacological treatment (same psychiatric medication at same
dose or no medication)

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

All participants:

1. Presence of ferromagnetic metal objects in the body, implanted electronic devices or
any other counter -indication for MRI.

2. Claustrophobia

3. Left handed or ambidextrous

4. History of myocardial infarction or heart failur, which may cause asymptomatic brain
lesions

5. Uncontrolled high blood pressure (resting systolic greater than 150 or diastolic
greater than 90 mm Hg)

6. Neurological conditions likely to impair cognitive function such as stroke, seizures,
dementia or organic brian syndrome

7. Any condition likely to impair cognitive function such as mental retardation or severe
pharmacological sedation

8. Current use of vasodilating beta-blockers (carvedilol, labetalol or nebivolol)

9. Alcohol or substance abuse or dependence other than nicotine within the last 6 months

10. Pregnancy, verified by urin pregnancy test for females during screening and on the day
of the scan.

Healthy Controls:

11. Current psychiatric Axis I disorder or Axis II schizophrenia spectrum disorder,
verified by Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID)
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