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Volume 137, Issue 3, Pages 215-221 (15 December 2005)


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Dermatoglyphic anomalies and neurocognitive deficits in sibling pairs discordant for schizophrenia spectrum disorders

Araceli RosaaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Manuel J. Cuestab, Víctor Peraltab, Amalia Zarzuelab, Fermín Serranob, Alfredo Martínez-Larreab, Lourdes Fañanása

Received 23 January 2003; received in revised form 19 September 2004; accepted 20 July 2005.

Abstract 

The neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia suggests that adverse genetic loading in conjunction with environmental factors early in fetal life causes a disruption of neural development, decades before the symptomatic manifestation of the disease. Neurocognitive deficits have been observed early on the course of schizophrenia, and their association with an early developmental brain lesion has been postulated. Dermatoglyphics have been analyzed in schizophrenia as markers of prenatal brain injury because of their early fetal ontogenesis and susceptibility to the same environmental factors that can also affect cerebral development. The aim of our study was to conduct a comparative examination of neurocognitive functions and dermatoglyphic variables in 89 sibling pairs discordant for schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Therefore, we investigated the association between these two markers to explore the prenatal origin of cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. The affected siblings were significantly impaired on all the cognitive variables assessed (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, Trail Making Test and Continuous Performance Test) and had a greater number of dermatoglyphic anomalies. These results suggest the influence of intrauterine environmental factors in the siblings affected with schizophrenia. However, we did not detect a significant association between these two vulnerability markers in the schizophrenic patients, suggesting the role of genetic or late environmental factors in the origin of the neurocognitive deficits found in these patients.

a Unitat d'Antropologia, Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain

b Psychiatric Unit, Virgen del Camino Hospital, Irunlarrea s/n, 31008 Pamplona, Spain

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +34 93 402 14 61.

PII: S0165-1781(05)00210-6

doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2005.07.006


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