Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3043420 Clinical Neurophysiology 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo examine whether deficits in focal lateralized motor system activation would differentiate between subjects with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and subjects with a major depressive episode. Reductions of Bereitschaftspotential amplitude have been described for both diagnostic groups.MethodsWe analyzed multi-channel lateralized movement-related potentials (LMRP) during choice reaction movements in 16 schizophrenic/schizoaffective patients in partial remission with predominant negative symptoms, 18 patients with a non-psychotic major depression and two healthy control groups age-matched to the respective patient groups (20/23 subjects).ResultsA significant reduction of lateralized potentials over the (pre-)motor areas immediately preceding and around movement execution was found only in subjects with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder but not with a major depressive episode. Reduced LMRP amplitudes correlated with negative symptoms (SANS score). Other movement stages (preceding response-locked ‘contingent negative variation’ during response selection and post-movement evaluation during motor postimperative negative variation) were not affected in the same way.ConclusionsDeficits in focal motor cortex activation during movement execution may reflect rather schizophrenia-specific deficits in fronto-striatal circuits. A general lack of drive and depressed mood did not alter the degree of lateralization of motor activation during movement execution.SignificanceLateralization of movement-related potentials could differentiate psychotic from non-psychotic disorders on the group level.

► Lateralized movement-related potentials were reduced in subjects with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder compared to subjects with a major depressive episode. ► The time interval around movement execution was affected. ► Deficits in lateralized primary motor cortex activation during the command to muscle contraction may distinguish schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder from non-psychotic forms major depression.

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