Title: Reducing Risk of Getting Schizophrenia
1Reducing Risk of Getting Schizophrenia
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3Cannabis
- Over 30 published scientific research papers
linking marijuana to schizophrenia - Regular cannabis users by age 15Â are four times
as likely to have a diagnosis of schizophreniform
disorder at age 26Â than controls. (Arseneault et
al 2002)
4Interaction with pre-existing psychosis
Cannabis
T1
No pre-existing psychosis
Pre-existing psychosis
2.2
54.7
T3
American Journal of Epidemiology, 2002
5Action
- Elimination of cannabis use would reduce the
incidence of schizophrenia by approximately 8 - Discourage cannabis use in adolescence under the
age of 18 - Discourage cannabis use in adolescence with FH
- Discourage cannabis use in adolescence with
schizotypal traits.
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7Urbanicity
- Individuals who spent their first 15 years of
life in a highly urban area were nearly three
times as likely to be diagnosed with
schizophrenia, compared with people who grew up
in rural areas. (Pedersen CB and Mortensen PB
2001). - A fifth to a third of individuals exposed to both
the urban upbringing and the genetic risk
factors attract the disorder because of their
coparticipation. (van Os et al 2004)
8Do genes enhance urban risk? (n7076)
FH
?29.1, df1, P0.003
FH-
Population density
Am J Psychiatry, 2004
9Action
- Living outside a city before age 15 may reduce
chances of getting schizophrenia - Avoid raising up children in dense urban
environment especially if FH
10Dysfunctional families
- Risk of getting schizophrenia (for children
genetically predisposed to schizophrenia) can be
up to eight times higher in high stress
"dysfunctional families" vs. low stress
households (Tienari et al 2004)
11Action
- Attempt to keep stress levels in the family
environment at a relatively low level. Learn how
to manage stress well. Stress Information.
12Pregnancy Infections
- Mothers who suffer from flu, viruses and other
infections during the first trimester of
pregnancy are at significantly increased risk of
schizophrenia - up to seven times higher than
children who are not exposed to flu/viruses
during the first trimester of pregnancy. (Brown
et al 2004)
13Action
- Become pregnant only after (at least several
weeks after) taking a vaccination shot. Make
extra efforts to avoid exposure of mother to
influenza and other viruses during pregnancy.
14Obstetric Complications
- Risk for schizophrenia is four times higher for
children who suffer from hypoxia during
childbirth (Dalman BJP 2001)
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16Action
- For reduced risk of children with schizophrenia,
mothers should make extra efforts to avoid any
possible delivery complications and to be in the
best possible hospital environment in case
complications do occur.
17Paternal Age
- Children born to fathers aged over 50 could be as
much as four times more likely to develop
schizophrenia than those born to fathers aged 21
to 24(Rasmussen et al 2004 BMJ)
18Action
- For reduced risk of children with schizophrenia,
men may choose to have children while they are
younger (under 40) rather than older.
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22PREVENTION upon indicators of developmental
vulnerability
mission Impossible
- the great majority of preschizophrenia children
scoring well within the normal range. - predictive value will be too low for the purpose
of screening and prevention.
23Prepsychotic Expression of Illness
24Continuity Prediction
Psychotic symptom
7000
1 year
5500
Psychotic disorder
2 years
4700
Hanssen, Bak et al, 1998
25CIDI ratings at T1 as independent predictors of
being incident patient at T3
Hanssen et al, 2000
26The number of people screening positive for
subclinical psychotic experiences who needed to
be treated to prevent one case of full-blown
psychoticdisorder
27- Early intervention in the general population is
not feasible, at least not on the basis of the
subclinical psychosis screening criterion. - The answer is increase Prevalence from 1 to say
50 . Then PV will be 50 .
28Making schizophrenia more predictable but for
fewer patients
29Sample Enrichment Strategy
- most widely used approach but possibly also the
worst understood. - the predictive value of any factor, whether it be
schizotypal symptoms, sex, color of the eyes, or
any other random variable, would have been at
least 50
30Predictors of schizophrenia dividing the high
risk ill group from other high-risk participants
Johnstone et al 2004 BJP
31Filter model of psychotic symptoms and psychotic
disorder
5. Psychiatric hospital
32ASPIS (N 2000)
- SCHIZOTYPY
- COGNITION
- GENES
33Endophenotypes for Schizophrenia
34Candidate genes for Schizophrenia
35Effect of COMT genotype on Schizotypal Dimensions
- COMT GENOTYPE
- VAL / VAL
- DOPAMINE
- VAL / MET
- MET / MET
- SCHIZOTYP. PHENOTYPE
- POSITIVE
- NEGATIVE
- DISORGANIZED
- PARANOID
-
Stefanis et al. 2004 Biol. Psychiatry
36COMT GENOTYPE EFFECT ON NEGATIVE SCHIZOTYPY ASPIS
- Young conscripts (n542) with lower level of
dopamine transmission in PFC, score
significantly higher on negative schizotypal
items, related to social isolation and
indifference for social contact.
Stefanis et al. 2004 Biol. Psychiatry
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38DOPAMINE Tuning Cognitive Performance
- Low levels of dopamine transmission in PFC
associated with increased inconsistency of
response (noise) during cognitive tasks
Stefanis et al. American Journal of Psychiatry
(in press)
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