Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II
View graph of relations

Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment. / Crawford, Trevor; Haeger, B.; Kennard, Christopher et al.
In: Psychological Medicine, Vol. 25, No. 3, 1995, p. 473-483.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Crawford, T, Haeger, B, Kennard, C, Reveley, MA & Henderson, L 1995, 'Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment', Psychological Medicine, vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 473-483. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291700033390

APA

Crawford, T., Haeger, B., Kennard, C., Reveley, M. A., & Henderson, L. (1995). Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment. Psychological Medicine, 25(3), 473-483. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291700033390

Vancouver

Crawford T, Haeger B, Kennard C, Reveley MA, Henderson L. Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment. Psychological Medicine. 1995;25(3):473-483. doi: 10.1017/S0033291700033390

Author

Crawford, Trevor ; Haeger, B. ; Kennard, Christopher et al. / Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II : the role of neuroleptic treatment. In: Psychological Medicine. 1995 ; Vol. 25, No. 3. pp. 473-483.

Bibtex

@article{75e42a3fe2694046a430478988d8277c,
title = "Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II: the role of neuroleptic treatment",
abstract = "The effects of dopamine-antagonistic neuroleptic (NL) medication on saccadic eye movements were compared in matched groups of 40 NL-treated and 18 NL-free schizophrenic patients and in 18 NL-treated and 14 NL-free bipolar affective patients. Manipulation of the saccadic paradigm yielded data on four types of saccade: those reflexively elicited by novel stimuli (REFLEX saccades), those directed towards the remembered location of a target now extinguished (REM) or towards the location where a predictably alternating target is expected to appear (PRED), or ANTI saccades, directed away from the stimulus to the mirror image location. Extensive psychiatric, neurological and neuropsychological assessments were also carried out on all subjects. The saccades of NL-treated patients, regardless of diagnosis, were less spatially accurate than those of NL-free patients, with a greater tendency to fall short of the target when generated towards the locus of a mentally represented target. This effect was greatest with a predictably alternating target, especially during periods when target visibility was withdrawn, only a temporal cue remaining. This pattern of impairment which is also found in early stages of Parkinson's disease is likely to be due to deficiency of striatal dopamine. Its best clinical predictors were disease duration, and Webster–Parkinsonism scores. Failure to suppress reflexive saccades to the stimulus in the REM and ANTI paradigms were more closely associated with schizophrenia than with NL treatment and were best predicted by negative symptoms and Wisconsin perseverative errors, both of which are widely regarded as indicators of frontal lobe dysfunction.",
keywords = "Schizophrenia, neuroleptic, antisaccade, cognition",
author = "Trevor Crawford and B. Haeger and Christopher Kennard and Reveley, {M. A.} and L. Henderson",
year = "1995",
doi = "10.1017/S0033291700033390",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "473--483",
journal = "Psychological Medicine",
issn = "0033-2917",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Saccadic abnormalities in psychotic patients II

T2 - the role of neuroleptic treatment

AU - Crawford, Trevor

AU - Haeger, B.

AU - Kennard, Christopher

AU - Reveley, M. A.

AU - Henderson, L.

PY - 1995

Y1 - 1995

N2 - The effects of dopamine-antagonistic neuroleptic (NL) medication on saccadic eye movements were compared in matched groups of 40 NL-treated and 18 NL-free schizophrenic patients and in 18 NL-treated and 14 NL-free bipolar affective patients. Manipulation of the saccadic paradigm yielded data on four types of saccade: those reflexively elicited by novel stimuli (REFLEX saccades), those directed towards the remembered location of a target now extinguished (REM) or towards the location where a predictably alternating target is expected to appear (PRED), or ANTI saccades, directed away from the stimulus to the mirror image location. Extensive psychiatric, neurological and neuropsychological assessments were also carried out on all subjects. The saccades of NL-treated patients, regardless of diagnosis, were less spatially accurate than those of NL-free patients, with a greater tendency to fall short of the target when generated towards the locus of a mentally represented target. This effect was greatest with a predictably alternating target, especially during periods when target visibility was withdrawn, only a temporal cue remaining. This pattern of impairment which is also found in early stages of Parkinson's disease is likely to be due to deficiency of striatal dopamine. Its best clinical predictors were disease duration, and Webster–Parkinsonism scores. Failure to suppress reflexive saccades to the stimulus in the REM and ANTI paradigms were more closely associated with schizophrenia than with NL treatment and were best predicted by negative symptoms and Wisconsin perseverative errors, both of which are widely regarded as indicators of frontal lobe dysfunction.

AB - The effects of dopamine-antagonistic neuroleptic (NL) medication on saccadic eye movements were compared in matched groups of 40 NL-treated and 18 NL-free schizophrenic patients and in 18 NL-treated and 14 NL-free bipolar affective patients. Manipulation of the saccadic paradigm yielded data on four types of saccade: those reflexively elicited by novel stimuli (REFLEX saccades), those directed towards the remembered location of a target now extinguished (REM) or towards the location where a predictably alternating target is expected to appear (PRED), or ANTI saccades, directed away from the stimulus to the mirror image location. Extensive psychiatric, neurological and neuropsychological assessments were also carried out on all subjects. The saccades of NL-treated patients, regardless of diagnosis, were less spatially accurate than those of NL-free patients, with a greater tendency to fall short of the target when generated towards the locus of a mentally represented target. This effect was greatest with a predictably alternating target, especially during periods when target visibility was withdrawn, only a temporal cue remaining. This pattern of impairment which is also found in early stages of Parkinson's disease is likely to be due to deficiency of striatal dopamine. Its best clinical predictors were disease duration, and Webster–Parkinsonism scores. Failure to suppress reflexive saccades to the stimulus in the REM and ANTI paradigms were more closely associated with schizophrenia than with NL treatment and were best predicted by negative symptoms and Wisconsin perseverative errors, both of which are widely regarded as indicators of frontal lobe dysfunction.

KW - Schizophrenia

KW - neuroleptic

KW - antisaccade

KW - cognition

U2 - 10.1017/S0033291700033390

DO - 10.1017/S0033291700033390

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 473

EP - 483

JO - Psychological Medicine

JF - Psychological Medicine

SN - 0033-2917

IS - 3

ER -