Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.

Background: Visual sensory processing deficits are consistently observed in schizophrenia, with clear amplitude reduction of the visual evoked potential (VEP) during the initial 50-150 milliseconds of processing. Similar deficits are seen in unaffected first-degree relatives and drug-naïve...

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Main Authors: John J Foxe, Sherlyn eYeap, Victoria M. Leavitt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00164/full
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spelling doaj-2b8a5082bc4645458af1f3c9a7dfb38d2020-11-24T22:58:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402013-12-01410.3389/fpsyt.2013.0016462405Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.John J Foxe0John J Foxe1Sherlyn eYeap2Victoria M. Leavitt3Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric ResearchAlbert Einstein College of MedicineSt. Vincent’s HospitalQueens College of the City University of New YorkBackground: Visual sensory processing deficits are consistently observed in schizophrenia, with clear amplitude reduction of the visual evoked potential (VEP) during the initial 50-150 milliseconds of processing. Similar deficits are seen in unaffected first-degree relatives and drug-naïve first-episode patients, pointing to these deficits as potential endophenotypic markers. Schizophrenia is also associated with deficits in neural plasticity, implicating dysfunction of both glutamatergic and gabaergic systems. Here, we sought to understand the intersection of these two domains, asking whether short-term plasticity during early visual processing is specifically affected in schizophrenia. Methods: Brief periods of monocular deprivation induce relatively rapid changes in the amplitude of the early VEP – i.e. short-term plasticity. Twenty patients and twenty non-psychiatric controls participated. VEPs were recorded during binocular viewing, and were compared to the sum of VEP responses during brief monocular viewing periods (i.e. Left-eye + Right-eye viewing). Results: Under monocular conditions, neurotypical controls exhibited an effect that patients failed to demonstrate. That is, the amplitude of the summed monocular VEPs was robustly greater than the amplitude elicited binocularly during the initial sensory processing period. In patients, this binocular effect was absent. Limitations: Patients were all medicated. Ideally, this study would also include first-episode unmedicated patients.Conclusions: These results suggest that short-term compensatory mechanisms that allow healthy individuals to generate robust VEPs in the context of monocular deprivation are not effectively activated in patients with schizophrenia. This simple assay may provide a useful biomarker of short-term plasticity in the psychotic disorders and a target endophenotype for therapeutic interventions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00164/fullElectrophysiologyEEGvisual evoked potentialpsychosisVisionbiomarker
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John J Foxe
John J Foxe
Sherlyn eYeap
Victoria M. Leavitt
spellingShingle John J Foxe
John J Foxe
Sherlyn eYeap
Victoria M. Leavitt
Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Electrophysiology
EEG
visual evoked potential
psychosis
Vision
biomarker
author_facet John J Foxe
John J Foxe
Sherlyn eYeap
Victoria M. Leavitt
author_sort John J Foxe
title Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
title_short Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
title_full Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
title_fullStr Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
title_full_unstemmed Brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
title_sort brief monocular deprivation as an assay of short-term visual sensory plasticity in schizophrenia – the binocular effect.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Background: Visual sensory processing deficits are consistently observed in schizophrenia, with clear amplitude reduction of the visual evoked potential (VEP) during the initial 50-150 milliseconds of processing. Similar deficits are seen in unaffected first-degree relatives and drug-naïve first-episode patients, pointing to these deficits as potential endophenotypic markers. Schizophrenia is also associated with deficits in neural plasticity, implicating dysfunction of both glutamatergic and gabaergic systems. Here, we sought to understand the intersection of these two domains, asking whether short-term plasticity during early visual processing is specifically affected in schizophrenia. Methods: Brief periods of monocular deprivation induce relatively rapid changes in the amplitude of the early VEP – i.e. short-term plasticity. Twenty patients and twenty non-psychiatric controls participated. VEPs were recorded during binocular viewing, and were compared to the sum of VEP responses during brief monocular viewing periods (i.e. Left-eye + Right-eye viewing). Results: Under monocular conditions, neurotypical controls exhibited an effect that patients failed to demonstrate. That is, the amplitude of the summed monocular VEPs was robustly greater than the amplitude elicited binocularly during the initial sensory processing period. In patients, this binocular effect was absent. Limitations: Patients were all medicated. Ideally, this study would also include first-episode unmedicated patients.Conclusions: These results suggest that short-term compensatory mechanisms that allow healthy individuals to generate robust VEPs in the context of monocular deprivation are not effectively activated in patients with schizophrenia. This simple assay may provide a useful biomarker of short-term plasticity in the psychotic disorders and a target endophenotype for therapeutic interventions.
topic Electrophysiology
EEG
visual evoked potential
psychosis
Vision
biomarker
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00164/full
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