dc.creatorDias, Alvaro Machado
dc.creatorQueiroz, Artur Trancoso Lopo de
dc.creatorCoutinho, Vinícius Maracaja
dc.date2018-07-10T17:20:17Z
dc.date2018-07-10T17:20:17Z
dc.date2010
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-26T22:28:32Z
dc.date.available2023-09-26T22:28:32Z
dc.identifierDIAS, Alvaro Machado; QUEIROZ,Artur Trancoso Lopo de; COUTINHO, Vinícius Maracaja. Schizophrenia, brain disease and meta-analyses: integrating the pieces and testing Fusar-Poli's hypothesis. Medical Hypotheses, v. 74, p. 142–144, 2010.
dc.identifier0306-9877
dc.identifierhttps://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/27420
dc.identifier10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.018
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/8879714
dc.descriptionQueiroz, Artur Trancoso Lopo. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Gonçalo Moniz. Documento produzido em parceria ou por autor vinculado à Fiocruz, mas não consta à informação no documento.
dc.descriptionThis paper aims to discuss and test the hypothesis raised by Fusar-Poli [Fusar-Poli P. Can neuroimaging prove that schizophrenia is a brain disease? A radical hypothesis. Medical Hypotheses in press, corrected proof] that "on the basis of the available imaging literature there is no consistent evidence to reject the radical and provocative hypothesis that schizophrenia is not a brain disease". To achieve this goal, all meta-analyses on 'fMRI and schizophrenia' published during the current decade and indexed in Pubmed were summarized, as much as some other useful information, e.g., meta-analyses on genetic risk factors. Our main conclusion is that the literature fully supports the hypothesis that schizophrenia is a syndrome (not a disease) associated with brain abnormalities, despite the fact that there is no singular and reductionist pathway from the nosographic entity (schizophrenia) to its causes. This irreducibility is due to the fact that the syndrome has more than one dimension (e.g., cognitive, psychotic and negative) and each of them is related to abnormalities in specific neuronal networks. A psychiatric diagnosis is a statistical procedure; these dimensions are not identically represented in each diagnosticated case and this explains the existence of more than one pattern of brain abnormalities related to schizophrenia. For example, chronification is associated with negativism while the first psychotic episode is not; in that sense, the same person living with schizophrenia may reveal different symptoms and fMRI patterns along the course of his life, and this is precisely what defines schizophrenia since the time when it was called Dementia Praecox (first by pick then by Kraepelin). It is notable that 100% of the collected meta-analyses on 'fMRI and schizophrenia' reveal positive findings. Moreover, all meta-analyses that found positive associations between schizophrenia and genetic risk factors have to do with genes (SNPs) especially activated in neuronal tissue of the central nervous system (CNS), suggesting that, to the extent these polymorphisms are related to schizophrenia's etiology, they are also related to abnormal brain activity.
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherElsevier
dc.rightsrestricted access
dc.subjectEsquizofrenia
dc.subjectSistema nervoso central
dc.subjectHumanos
dc.subjectPredisposição Genética para Doença
dc.subjectImagem de ressonância magnética
dc.subjectSchizophrenia
dc.subjectCentral nervous system
dc.subjectHumans
dc.subjectGenetic Predisposition to Disease
dc.subjectMagnetic Resonance Imaging
dc.titleSchizophrenia, brain disease and meta-analyses: integrating the pieces and testing Fusar-Poli's hypothesis
dc.typeArticle


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