Psychiatry Neuroimaging Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 1249 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Psychol Med. 2011 May;41(5):959-69. doi: 10.1017/S0033291710001376. Epub 2010 Jul 22.
Patients with schizophrenia (SZ) characteristically exhibit supranormal levels of cortical activity to self-induced sensory stimuli, ostensibly because of abnormalities in the neural signals (corollary discharges, CDs) normatively involved in suppressing the sensory consequences of self-generated actions. The nature of these abnormalities is unknown. This study investigated whether SZ patients experience CDs that are abnormally delayed in their arrival at the sensory cortex.
Twenty-one patients with SZ and 25 matched control participants underwent electroencephalography (EEG). Participants' level of cortical suppression was calculated as the amplitude of the N1 component evoked by a button press-elicited auditory stimulus, subtracted from the N1 amplitude evoked by the same stimulus presented passively. In the three experimental conditions, the auditory stimulus was delivered 0, 50 or 100 ms subsequent to the button-press. Fifteen SZ patients and 17 healthy controls (HCs) also underwent diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and the fractional anisotropy (FA) of participants' arcuate fasciculus was used to predict their level of cortical suppression in the three conditions.
While the SZ patients exhibited subnormal N1 suppression to undelayed, self-generated auditory stimuli, these deficits were eliminated by imposing a 50-ms, but not a 100-ms, delay between the button-press and the evoked stimulus. Furthermore, the extent to which the 50-ms delay normalized a patient's level of N1 suppression was linearly related to the FA of their arcuate fasciculus.
These data suggest that SZ patients experience temporally delayed CDs to self-generated auditory stimuli, putatively because of structural damage to the white-matter (WM) fasciculus connecting the sites of discharge initiation and destination.
精神分裂症(SZ)患者表现出皮质活动水平高于正常的自我诱导感觉刺激,表面上是由于神经信号(副放电,CDs)异常,这些信号通常参与抑制自我产生动作的感觉后果。这些异常的性质尚不清楚。本研究旨在探讨 SZ 患者是否会经历 CD,其到达感觉皮质的时间异常延迟。
21 名 SZ 患者和 25 名匹配的对照组参与者接受了脑电图(EEG)检查。参与者的皮质抑制水平被计算为按钮按压诱发听觉刺激引起的 N1 成分的振幅,减去相同刺激被动呈现时引起的 N1 振幅。在三个实验条件下,听觉刺激在按钮按下后 0、50 或 100ms 后发出。15 名 SZ 患者和 17 名健康对照者(HCs)也接受了弥散张量成像(DTI)检查,参与者的弓状束的各向异性分数(FA)用于预测他们在三个条件下的皮质抑制水平。
虽然 SZ 患者对未延迟的自我产生的听觉刺激表现出亚正常的 N1 抑制,但通过在按钮按下和诱发刺激之间施加 50ms 而不是 100ms 的延迟,可以消除这些缺陷。此外,50ms 延迟使患者 N1 抑制水平正常化的程度与他们的弓状束的 FA 呈线性相关。
这些数据表明,SZ 患者对自我产生的听觉刺激经历了时间延迟的 CD,推测是由于连接放电起始和目的地的白质(WM)束的结构损伤所致。