Motor precision deficits in clinical high risk for psychosis.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-17 DOI:10.1007/s00406-023-01645-3
Katherine S F Damme, Y Catherine Han, Ziyan Han, Paul J Reber, Vijay A Mittal
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Abstract

Motor deficits appear prior to psychosis onset, provide insight into vulnerability as well as mechanisms that give rise to emerging illness, and are predictive of conversion. However, to date, the extant literature has often targeted a complex abnormality (e.g., gesture dysfunction, dyskinesia), or a single fundamental domain (e.g., accuracy) but rarely provided critical information about several of the individual components that make up more complex behaviors (or deficits). This preliminary study applies a novel implicit motor task to assess domains of motor accuracy, speed, recognition, and precision in individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis (CHR-p). Sixty participants (29 CHR-p; 31 healthy volunteers) completed clinical symptom interviews and a novel Serial Interception Sequence Learning (SISL) task that assessed implicit motor sequence accuracy, speed, precision, and explicit sequence recognition. These metrics were examined in multilevel models that enabled the examination of overall effects and changes in motor domains over blocks of trials and by positive/negative symptom severity. Implicit motor sequence accuracy, speed, and explicit sequence recognition were not detected as impacted in CHR-p. When compared to healthy controls, individuals at CHR-p were less precise in motor responses both overall (d = 0.91) and particularly in early blocks which normalized over later blocks. Within the CHR-p group, these effects were related to positive symptom levels (t = - 2.22, p = 0.036), such that individuals with higher symptom levels did not improve in motor precision over time (r's = 0.01-0.05, p's > 0.54). CHR-p individuals showed preliminary evidence of motor precision deficits but no other motor domain deficits, particularly in early performance that normalized with practice.

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精神病临床高危人群的运动精确度缺陷。
运动障碍会在精神病发病前出现,让人了解精神病的易感性以及导致新发疾病的机制,并能预测精神病的转归。然而,迄今为止,现有文献通常只针对一种复杂的异常(如手势功能障碍、运动障碍)或单一的基本领域(如准确性),却很少提供有关构成更复杂行为(或缺陷)的多个单独组成部分的关键信息。这项初步研究采用了一种新颖的内隐运动任务来评估精神病临床高危人群(CHR-p)的运动准确性、速度、识别性和精确性。60 名参与者(29 名临床高危精神病患者;31 名健康志愿者)完成了临床症状访谈和一项新颖的序列截取序列学习(SISL)任务,该任务评估了内隐运动序列的准确性、速度、精确性和显性序列识别。这些指标在多层次模型中进行了检验,从而能够在不同的试验组块中以及根据阳性/阴性症状的严重程度检验运动领域的整体效果和变化。内隐运动序列准确性、速度和外显序列识别在 CHR-p 中未发现受到影响。与健康对照组相比,CHR-p 患者的运动反应总体上不够精确(d = 0.91),尤其是在早期区块,而在后期区块则趋于正常。在 CHR-p 组中,这些影响与阳性症状水平有关(t = - 2.22,p = 0.036),因此症状水平较高的个体的运动精确度并没有随着时间的推移而提高(r's = 0.01-0.05,p's > 0.54)。CHR-p患者表现出运动精确度缺陷的初步证据,但没有其他运动领域的缺陷,尤其是早期表现,但在练习后趋于正常。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.80
自引率
4.30%
发文量
154
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The original papers published in the European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience deal with all aspects of psychiatry and related clinical neuroscience. Clinical psychiatry, psychopathology, epidemiology as well as brain imaging, neuropathological, neurophysiological, neurochemical and moleculargenetic studies of psychiatric disorders are among the topics covered. Thus both the clinician and the neuroscientist are provided with a handy source of information on important scientific developments.
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