4.7 Article

Electrophysiological and diffusion tensor imaging evidence of delayed corollary discharges in patients with schizophrenia

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume 41, Issue 5, Pages 959-969

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291710001376

Keywords

Arcuate fasciculus; conduction delays; efference copy; forward model; white matter

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [NHMRC 520627]
  2. National institutes of Health (NIH) [R03 MH068464-0, R01 MH 50747, T32 MH 016259, K05 MH 070047, R01 MH 082918, R01 DA 027802, R01 MH076989, R01 MH058262, K02 MH067967]
  3. Harvard Medical School
  4. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
  5. Department of Veterans Affairs
  6. Boston Center for Intervention Development and Applied Research (CIDAR) [P50 MH 080272]
  7. Center for Integration of Medicine and Innovative Technology
  8. Sloan Foundation
  9. Esther A. & Joseph Klingenstein Fund
  10. Dana Foundation

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Background. Patients with schizophrenia (SZ) characteristically exhibit supranormal levels of cortical activity to self-induced sensory stimuli, ostensibly because of abnormalities in the neural signals (corollary discharges, CDs) normatively involved in suppressing the sensory consequences of self-generated actions. The nature of these abnormalities is unknown. This study investigated whether SZ patients experience CDs that are abnormally delayed in their arrival at the sensory cortex. Method. Twenty-one patients with SZ and 25 matched control participants underwent electroencephalography (EEG). Participants' level of cortical suppression was calculated as the amplitude of the N1 component evoked by a button press-elicited auditory stimulus, subtracted from the N1 amplitude evoked by the same stimulus presented passively. In the three experimental conditions, the auditory stimulus was delivered 0, 50 or 100 ms subsequent to the button-press. Fifteen SZ patients and 17 healthy controls (HCs) also underwent diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and the fractional anisotropy (FA) of participants' arcuate fasciculus was used to predict their level of cortical suppression in the three conditions. Results. While the SZ patients exhibited subnormal N1 suppression to undelayed, self-generated auditory stimuli, these deficits were eliminated by imposing a 50-ms, but not a 100-ms, delay between the button-press and the evoked stimulus. Furthermore, the extent to which the 50-ms delay normalized a patient's level of N1 suppression was linearly related to the FA of their arcuate fasciculus. Conclusions. These data suggest that SZ patients experience temporally delayed CDs to self-generated auditory stimuli, putatively because of structural damage to the white-matter (WM) fasciculus connecting the sites of discharge initiation and destination.

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