Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Negative symptoms in schizophrenia (SZ), such as apathy and diminished expression, have limited treatments and significantly impact daily life. Our study focuses on the functional division of the striatum: limbic-motivation and reward, associative-cognition, and sensorimotor-sensory and motor processing, aiming to identify potential biomarkers for negative symptoms.

Study Design: This longitudinal, 2-center resting-state-fMRI (rsfMRI) study examines striatal seeds-to-whole-brain functional connectivity. We examined connectivity aberrations in patients with schizophrenia (PwSZ), focusing on stable group differences across 2-time points using intra-class-correlation and associated these with negative symptoms and measures of cognition. Additionally, in PwSZ, we used negative symptoms to predict striatal connectivity aberrations at the baseline and used the striatal aberration to predict symptoms 9 months later.

Study Results: A total of 143 participants (77 PwSZ, 66 controls) from 2 centers (Berlin/Geneva) participated. We found sensorimotor-striatum and associative-striatum hypoconnectivity. We identified 4 stable hypoconnectivity findings over 3 months, revealing striatal-fronto-parietal-cerebellar hypoconnectivity in PwSZ. From those findings, we found hypoconnectivity in the bilateral associative striatum with the bilateral paracingulate-gyrus and the anterior cingulate cortex in PwSZ. Additionally, hypoconnectivity between the associative striatum and the superior frontal gyrus was associated with lower cognition scores in PwSZ, and weaker sensorimotor striatum connectivity with the superior parietal lobule correlated negatively with diminished expression and could predict symptom severity 9 months later.

Conclusions: Importantly, patterns of weaker sensorimotor striatum and superior parietal lobule connectivity fulfilled the biomarker criteria: clinical significance, reflecting underlying pathophysiology, and stability across time and centers.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11548920PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbae052DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

negative symptoms
16
patients schizophrenia
8
diminished expression
8
connectivity aberrations
8
associative striatum
8
striatum superior
8
weaker sensorimotor
8
sensorimotor striatum
8
superior parietal
8
parietal lobule
8

Similar Publications

Purpose: To report pyramidal-like, hyperreflective changes of the outer retina and retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) in three patients with an atypical non-syphilitic outer retinopathy.

Study Design/materials And Methods: Single institutional case series conducted at the National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health.

Results: Hyperreflective, pyramidal lesions of the outer retina and RPE have been described in patients with syphilitic posterior segment uveitis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Initial findings linking Virtual Reality (VR)-based encoding to increased recollection at retrieval remain inconclusive due to heterogeneous study designs and dependence on behavioral data. To clarify under which circumstances VR-based encoding affects or enhances episodic memory retrieval, the fundamental question remains whether the encoding modality, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subcellular distribution-based reference-free cancer cell discrimination with a novel AIE cationic probe.

Anal Chim Acta

November 2025

College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan, 430072, China. Electronic address:

Background: The development of specific fluorescent probes for cancer cell discrimination holds significant promise for advancing cancer diagnostics. Conventionally, these probes operate by translating differences in biomarkers or microenvironmental factors into variations in whole-cell fluorescence intensity. However, this dominant, intensity-based strategy is highly susceptible to extraneous fluctuations arising from probe concentration, illumination instability and complex intracellular environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Design and characterisation of high-affinity aptamers for detecting HIV integrase.

Anal Chim Acta

November 2025

HIV-1 Molecular Epidemiology Laboratory, Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigación Sanitaria (IRYCIS), Microbiology Department, Hospital Universitario Ramón y Cajal, CIBER en Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Madrid, 28034, Spain. Electronic address:

Background: Currently, 39.9 million people are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and 1.3 million new infections occur annually, with over 170 circulating variants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Observational analysis of biological remission as a treatment target for severe asthma: UK severe asthma registry.

J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract

September 2025

Wellcome Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine, Queen's University Belfast, UK; Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK.

Background: The aim of biologic therapies in severe asthma is inhibition of T2 inflammatory pathways.

Objective: We hypothesized that patients who achieve complete suppression of IL-5 & IL4/IL13 pathways with biologic therapy (FeNO <20ppb & blood eosinophil count (BEC) <0.15x10ˆ9, 'biological remission') would have better outcomes than patients with incomplete suppression of T2 biology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF