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Relationship Between Brain Structural Abnormalities and Early Onset Psychotic Disorder–case Presentation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

B. Allkoja
Affiliation:
University hospital center “Mother Tereza”, Psychiatric service, Neuroscience, Tirana, Albania
E. Mitro
Affiliation:
University hospital center “Mother Tereza”, Psychiatric service, Neuroscience, Tirana, Albania
B. Zenelaj
Affiliation:
University hospital center “Mother Tereza”, Psychiatric service, Neuroscience, Tirana, Albania
V. Alikaj
Affiliation:
University of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Neuroscience, Tirana, Albania

Abstract

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Introduction

Contemporary structural models of several psychiatric disorders propose abnormalities in the structure and function of distinct neural networks. Clinical observations of affective and cognitive changes arising from cerebellar lesions and stimulation permit the hypothesis that the cerebellum may not be irrelevant in some neuropsychiatric states. There is evidence that patients with schizophrenia have altered corticocerebellar connectivity.

Objectives

To evidence a case with early onset psychosis accompanied with brain structural abnormalities.

Method

Case description.

Results

The patient is 15 years old girl with an acute psychotic episode. For more than two months she had demonstrated odd behavior, getting around all the time purposelessly, abandoned school etc. She presented with disorders of perceptions, disorganized speech, insomnia and fluctuations in her mood and behavior. In her brain, MRI was found vermian atrophy, and CT was found hypocampal glyosis and dilatation of temporal corn.

Conclusions

Although the structural mapping studies have been equivocal, the weight of evidence supports extending the study of cerebellar activity in schizophrenia. For example, the finding that unaffected first-degree relatives of probands with schizophrenia have reduced cerebellar volumes, along with the observation of reduced cerebellar volumes in neurolepticnaïve patients with schizophrenia, suggests that cerebellar atrophy may be a hereditary trait rather than a psychotropic associated epiphenomenon.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Viewing: Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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