Annotated Bibliography: Identifying The Precursors of Schizophrenia
Annotated Bibliography: Identifying The Precursors of Schizophrenia
Annotated Bibliography: Identifying The Precursors of Schizophrenia
Explanations such as this and her use of many examples from other
disorders (deafness, Down’s syndrome, etc.) helped delineate the
boundaries between gene expression and the influence of the
environment.
She also did not commit the error of relegating all environmental
influences to the waste bin and relying solely on genetics for her
explanations. She writes:
Phillips, Prashant. (2002). Soft Drug, Hard Facts [Electronic Version]. Mental
Health Practice, 5(7): 25.
The author’s conclusion is that using cannabis will not cause long
term psychosis. The purpose of using this article is that while I am dealing
with the diagnostic symptomology of preschizophrenic behavior (relying
largely on the previous article by M. Tsuang) I would make a short aside to
deal with fears about the influence of casual drug use on one’s chances of
developing a psychosis, in order to allay fears that even if one does not
have a schizophrenic relative, and even if one does not exhibit schizotaxic
symptomology, one may be one of the unlucky few to become
schizophrenic just because they tried hash one time.
Rust, J., Golombok, S., Abram, M. (1988). Creativity and Schizotypal Thinking
[Electronic Version]. Journal of Genetic Psychology, 15o(2): 225-227.
Harrison, Paul J., Owen, Michael J. (2003). Genes for schizophrenia? Recent
findings and their pathophysiological implications [Electronic Version].
The Lancet, 361: 417-419.
If the findings hold up, people who inherit either or both of the
critical gene versions still aren’t doomed to develop schizophrenia,
Cohen cautions. Further research is needed to identify other
genes, as well as environmental factors, that influence the same
NMDA-receptor pathway, he says (Bower, 2002, p. 195).
He concludes with the need for further study. I would include this
quote to illustrate that even with a description of schizophrenia on a
molecular level and genetic certainty (which we don’t have) we would still
need to take into account other factors that would affect how an individual
manifest their genetic makeup. In fact, we wouldn’t know if they would be
schizophrenic until they began exhibiting symptoms, even if we had
extensive genetic information on them. Apart from the development of
new treatments targeted at genes and molecular pathways, the genetic
understanding of the disease has limited diagnostic utility. We still must
rely on symptoms for our understanding of how, in whom, and when
schizophrenia may manifest. We must simply pinpoint traits that are
closer in origin to the genetic underpinnings of the disease, so we can
catch it sooner and with more certainty.
Fitzgerald, P. B. (2001). The role of early warning symptoms in the detection and
prevention of relapse in schizophrenia [Electronic Version]. Australian
and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 35: 758–764.
In this article the author reviews various programs for the early
detections of schizophrenia and concludes that, with the proper approach,
it is indeed possible to detect schizophrenia early and prevent relapses in
those who are already schizophrenic. He writes:
The studies reviewed suggest the best approach required the
utilisation of clinical judgement, non-specific and specific
symptoms, frequent assessments and the involvement of patients,
clinicians and carers (Fitzgerald, 2001, p. 761).
Davidson, M., Reichenburg, A., Rabinowitz, J., et al. (1999). Behavioral and
Intellectual Markers for Schizophrenia in Apparently Healthy Male
Adolescents. American Journal of Psychiatry, 156: 1328-1335.