Attentional network task in schizophrenic patients and theirs unaffected fi rst degree relatives: a potential endofenotype

Authors

  • S. Guerra López Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana; Department of Clinical Neurophysiology Moron General Hospital Ciego de Ávila, Cuba
  • J. Iglesias Fuster Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • M. Martín Reyes Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • T. M. Bravo Collazo Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • R. Mendoza Quiñones Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • A. Reyes Berazain Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • M. A. Pedroso Rodríguez Department of Clinical Neurophysiology Moron General Hospital Ciego de Ávila, Cuba
  • T. Días de Villarvilla Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • M. Antonieta Bobés Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana
  • M. Valdés-Sosa Department of Biological Psychiatry Cuban Neuroscience Center Havana

Keywords:

Attention, Alerting, Executive control, Schizophrenia, Endophenotype, Orienting

Abstract

Introduction. In recent years, reports of attentional deficits in schizophrenic patients and in their biological relatives have rapidly increased, including an important effort to search for the endophenotypes in order to link specific genes to this illness. Posner et al developed a test, the Attention Network Test (ANT), to study the neural networks. This test provides a separate measure for each one of the three anatomically-defined attention networks (alerting, orienting and executive control).

Methodology. In this paper, we investigate the attentional performance in 32 schizophrenic patients, 29 unaffected first degree relatives and 29 healthy controls using the ANT through a study of family association. We have studied the efficiency of the segregated executive control, alerting and orienting networks by measuring how response latencies (reaction time) were modified by the cue position and the flanking stimuli. We also studied the familial association of these attentional alterations.

Results. The ANOVA revealed main effects of flanker and cue condition and a significant interaction effect between flanker and groups studied. The schizophrenic patients and their relatives had a longer median reaction time than the control group. The probands and their relatives significantly differed from the healthy controls in terms of their conflict resolution; however, the alerting network appeared to be conserved.

Conclusions. Our results support the thesis of a specific attentional deficit in schizophrenia and show the segregation of the three attentional networks. The family association of these reported alterations supports the idea of a potential endophenotype in schizophrenia.

Published

2011-01-01

How to Cite

S. Guerra López, et al. “Attentional Network Task in Schizophrenic Patients and Theirs Unaffected Fi Rst Degree Relatives: A Potential Endofenotype”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 39, no. 1, Jan. 2011, pp. 32-44, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/683.

Issue

Section

Original