Waddington J L, Lane A, Larkin C, O'Callaghan E
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Biol Psychiatry. 1999 Jul 1;46(1):31-9. doi: 10.1016/s0006-3223(99)00055-4.
A "read-back" analysis of schizophrenia, from chronic illness, through the first psychotic episode, to psychosocial and neurointegrative abnormalities of childhood and infancy, leads to the intrauterine period as a primary focus for etiological events. Evidence for a characteristic topography of cerebro-craniofacial dysmorphology in schizophrenia is reviewed, and interpreted to estimate: (i) the timing of dysmorphic event(s); (ii) the nature of early cellular and molecular mechanisms which might determine that topography of dysmorphogenesis; and (iii) the population homogeneity of these processes. It is argued that early cerebro-craniofacial dysmorphogenesis in schizophrenia should be conceptualized as a first stage not in a static but rather in a dynamic, lifetime trajectory of disease.