Author:
ZAKZANIS KONSTANTINE K.,HEINRICHS R. WALTER
Abstract
Structural and physiological frontal brain system
deficits in patients with schizophrenia are reviewed quantitatively.
We report effect sizes from studies since 1980 that used
structural (CT, MRI), and functional (PET) neuroimaging
methods. We found both literatures to be distinguished
by heterogeneity whereby most patients show normative frontal
function and structure, a minority shows diminished values
and some patients demonstrate augmented function and structure
rather than deficit. The average magnitude of difference
between patients and controls is generally too modest to
support the idea that frontal brain dysfunction is a necessary
component of schizophrenia. This modesty is most apparent
in average effects obtained for frontal brain volume (M
= −.36), left frontal brain volume (M =
−.16), frontal resting metabolism, and blood flow
(M = −.64). Effect sizes of this magnitude
imply that schizophrenia and control distributions overlap
by as much as 88% and no less than about 60% on frontal
brain measures. It is only when behavioral measures are
employed as activation tasks during frontal blood flow
and metabolism studies, that average effect sizes rise
in magnitude to indicate patient–control distribution
overlaps that are less than 50%. Overall, the findings
are hard to incorporate within single disease models that
propose major involvement of the frontal system, at least
at the degree of resolution obtained with current imaging
technology. (JINS, 1999, 5, 556–566.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
51 articles.
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