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Reduced latent inhibition in people with schizophrenia: an effect of psychosis or of its treatment.

Abstract:
BACKGROUND: People with schizophrenia show impaired attention. This could result from reduced latent inhibition (a measure of ability to filter out irrelevant stimuli). Previous studies have found reduced auditory latent inhibition in people with acute schizophrenia: we tested whether this results from psychosis or from drug treatment. METHOD: We measured auditory latent inhibition in two studies. One compared antipsychotic-naive people with acute schizophrenia with patients within two weeks of starting antipsychotic treatment. The second compared healthy volunteers given either saline or 1.0 mg haloperidol, intravenously. RESULTS: Latent inhibition was absent in treated patients, but was clearly present in patients who were naive to antipsychotics. Latent inhibition was absent in volunteers given haloperidol, but was clearly present in those given saline. CONCLUSIONS: The reduced auditory latent inhibition seen in acute schizophrenia is more plausibly due to antipsychotic treatment than to the disorder. Unless neuropsychological models of schizophrenia incorporate evidence from drug-free patients and drug-treated healthy controls, they may be invalid.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1192/bjp.172.3.243

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Journal:
British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science More from this journal
Volume:
172
Issue:
MAR.
Pages:
243-249
Publication date:
1998-03-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1472-1465
ISSN:
0007-1250


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:2963
UUID:
uuid:1724a5a1-3bff-4ce2-b8d2-7735615953f9
Local pid:
pubs:2963
Source identifiers:
2963
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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