Movement-related potentials prior to self-initiated movements are impairedin patients with schizophrenia and negative signs

Citation
R. Fuller et al., Movement-related potentials prior to self-initiated movements are impairedin patients with schizophrenia and negative signs, EXP BRAIN R, 126(4), 1999, pp. 545-555
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
ISSN journal
00144819 → ACNP
Volume
126
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
545 - 555
Database
ISI
SICI code
0014-4819(199906)126:4<545:MPPTSM>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
It has been suggested that certain symptoms of schizophrenia such as povert y of action and speech, and stereotyped action, reflect a dysfunction of "w illed" actions while the processes involved in "stimulus-driven" actions re main intact. The aim of this study was to test this hypothesis by measuring movement-related potentials (MRPs) prior to self-initiated and externally triggered movements in three groups of subjects, five patients with a diagn osis of schizophrenia with high ratings of negative signs, six patients wit h a diagnosis of schizophrenia with high ratings of positive symptoms and s ix normal controls. Subjects lifted their right index finger at an average rate of once every 3 s in two conditions, either as self-initiated movement s, or as a response to a tone while MRPs were recorded from frontal, fronto central, central and parietal sites. The patients with schizophrenia and hi gh ratings of negative signs had reduced amplitude of MRPs for the late and peak component and reduced slope of the early and late MRPs prior to self- initiated movements. These differences were not found prior to externally t riggered movements. The patients with schizophrenia with higher ratings of positive symptoms did not differ significantly from the normal controls in terms of amplitude or slope of MRPs prior to self-initiated or externally t riggered movements. These findings support the proposal that patients with schizophrenia, particularly those with negative signs, show impairment of w illed actions but are not impaired in externally triggered movements. These deficits in willed actions may be mediated by impaired functioning of the frontostriatal loops.