Freedman_2003_Curr.Psychiatry.Rep_5_155

Reference

Title : The genetics of sensory gating deficits in schizophrenia - Freedman_2003_Curr.Psychiatry.Rep_5_155
Author(s) : Freedman R , Olincy A , Ross RG , Waldo MC , Stevens KE , Adler LE , Leonard S
Ref : Curr Psychiatry Rep , 5 :155 , 2003
Abstract : Sensory gating abnormalities are an early clinical symptom of schizophrenia, and are characterized by a decrease in the brain's normal ability to inhibit the response to unimportant stimuli. Patients appear hypervigilant and have difficulty focusing their attention. A neurobiologic mechanism involved in these difficulties is nicotinic cholinergic modulation of inhibitory neuronal activity in the hippocampus. One measure of sensory gating abnormalities, diminished inhibition of the P50 evoked response to repeated auditory stimuli, has been linked to the chromosome 15q14 locus of the alpha-7-nicotinic receptor gene. This site is one of several that have shown evidence for linkage to schizophrenia, as well as to bipolar disorder, across several studies. Polymorphisms in the core promoter of the gene are associated with schizophrenia and also with diminished inhibition of the P50 response. These genetic data may identify a new pathophysiologic target for drug discovery.
ESTHER : Freedman_2003_Curr.Psychiatry.Rep_5_155
PubMedSearch : Freedman_2003_Curr.Psychiatry.Rep_5_155
PubMedID: 12685995

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Citations formats

Freedman R, Olincy A, Ross RG, Waldo MC, Stevens KE, Adler LE, Leonard S (2003)
The genetics of sensory gating deficits in schizophrenia
Curr Psychiatry Rep 5 :155

Freedman R, Olincy A, Ross RG, Waldo MC, Stevens KE, Adler LE, Leonard S (2003)
Curr Psychiatry Rep 5 :155