Attentional functioning in schizotypal personality disorder [published erratum appears in Am J Psychiatry 1997 Aug;154(8):1180]
OBJECTIVE: Previous research has shown biological, phenomenological, and cognitive similarities between schizophrenic patients and individuals with schizophrenia-related personality disorders and features. Evidence further suggests that of these common dysfunctions, abnormal attention is one of the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of psychiatry 1997-05, Vol.154 (5), p.655-660 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: Previous research has shown biological, phenomenological, and
cognitive similarities between schizophrenic patients and individuals with
schizophrenia-related personality disorders and features. Evidence further
suggests that of these common dysfunctions, abnormal attention is one of
the most promising indicators of a biological susceptibility to
schizophrenia-related disorders. Although attentional dysfunctions have
been reliably detected in schizophrenic patients as well as in a variety of
populations at risk for schizophrenia, few studies have investigated
attention in clinical patients with schizotypal personality disorder. In
this study, the extent of attentional impairment was assessed in subjects
with schizotypal personality disorder, normal comparison subjects, patients
with other personality disorders, and schizophrenic patients. METHOD:
Thirty subjects with schizotypal personality disorder, 35 subjects with
other personality disorders (i.e., clinic patients with non-odd cluster
personality disorders), 36 subjects with schizophrenia, and 20 comparison
subjects who did not meet criteria for any axis I or axis II disorder
participated in this study. All subjects were diagnosed according to
DSM-III criteria. Attention was assessed by using the Continuous
Performance Test, Identical Pairs Version. RESULTS: Analyses indicated that
subjects with schizotypal personality disorder, like schizophrenic
subjects, performed significantly worse than comparison subjects on both
the verbal and spatial tasks of the Continuous Performance Test, Identical
Pairs Version. In contrast, patients with other personality disorders
performed similarly to comparison subjects across conditions. CONCLUSIONS:
These results suggest that patients with schizotypal personality disorder
are impaired in their attentional functioning relative to normal comparison
subjects and that they display deficits that are similar to the pattern
characterizing schizophrenic patients. |
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ISSN: | 0002-953X 1535-7228 |
DOI: | 10.1176/ajp.154.5.655 |