The dopamine (DA) hypothesis and the asymmetry hypothesis of schizophrenia converge in the possibility that, at least in a subgroup of schizophrenia, DA dysfunction may be asymmetric. Circling behavior in animals is mediated through a final common DA pathway. Rotational preference in humans is a newly described subtle clinical neurological sign. It is probably akin to hemispatial-neglect in neurological patients and to circling behavior in animals. Both hemi-neglect and circling have been specifically associated with asymmetry of DA attentional and motor pathways, and with striatal, prefrontal and inferior parietal lesions. Animals, as a rule, neglect-to-rotate toward the hemisphere with higher striatal DA activity, regardless of physical surroundings. DA receptor agonists AS A RULE induce preferential rotation AWAY FROM lesions (e.g. unilateral prefrontal lesions) that causes ipsilateral increase in the number of striatal DA receptors. A direct means of seeking human analogues of circling behavior was not previously available. A belt-mounted electronic rotometer, has been designed by the PI so that its output is determined by precisely the same logic employed with the circling apparatus commonly used to study rodents. The studies proposed here will use this novel automated instrument. We will record rotational behavior in unmedicated and never-medicated symptomatic schizophrenic patients. To test the hypothesis that a subgroup within the schizophrenic syndrome has dys-regulated asymmetric supersensitivity (right > left) of the striatal DA receptors. We will ask: a. Is there at least a subgroup within the schizophrenic syndrome that has clinical evidence of asymmetric DA dysfunction; a spontaneous left-prone rotational preference compares to controls? b. Will a bromocriptine challenge accentuate this neglect of right-sided turning exhibited by unmedicated schizophrenic patients?

Project Start
1987-09-30
Project End
1992-08-31
Budget Start
1987-09-30
Budget End
1988-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1987
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Diego
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
077758407
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92093
Mohr, Christine; Bracha, H Stefan; Brugger, Peter (2003) Magical ideation modulates spatial behavior. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 15:168-74
Bracha, H S; Livingston, R; Dykman, K et al. (1995) An automated electronic method for quantifying spinning (circling) in children with autistic disorder. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 7:213-7
Ali, S F; Newport, G D; Bracha, H S (1994) Phencyclidine and (+)-MK-801-induced circling preference: correlation with monoamine levels in striatum of the rat brain. Neurotoxicol Teratol 16:335-42
Green, M F; Bracha, H S; Satz, P et al. (1994) Preliminary evidence for an association between minor physical anomalies and second trimester neurodevelopment in schizophrenia. Psychiatry Res 53:119-27
Torrey, E F; Taylor, E H; Bracha, H S et al. (1994) Prenatal origin of schizophrenia in a subgroup of discordant monozygotic twins. Schizophr Bull 20:423-32
Karson, C N; Lyon, N; Amick, R et al. (1993) The profile of cognitive impairment in elderly dyskinetic subjects. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 5:61-5
Bracha, H S; Livingston, R L; Clothier, J et al. (1993) Correlation of severity of psychiatric patients' delusions with right hemispatial inattention (left-turning behavior). Am J Psychiatry 150:330-2
Bracha, H S; Torrey, E F; Gottesman, I I et al. (1992) Second-trimester markers of fetal size in schizophrenia: a study of monozygotic twins. Am J Psychiatry 149:1355-61
Bracha, H S; Torrey, E F; Bigelow, L B et al. (1991) Subtle signs of prenatal maldevelopment of the hand ectoderm in schizophrenia: a preliminary monozygotic twin study. Biol Psychiatry 30:719-25
Bracha, H S (1991) Etiology of structural asymmetry in schizophrenia: an alternative hypothesis. Schizophr Bull 17:551-3

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