Sixty-four Japanese patients (34 men and 30 women, mean age 36.5±7.2 years; means±SD are reported) who met DSM-III-R
+5 criteria for schizophrenia were recruited from the psychiatric wards in Fujimoto and Kagoshima University hospitals. None of the patients had a history of neurologic disorders, metabolic disorders (e.g., diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism), severe head trauma, or electroconvulsive therapy. No patients had been diagnosed with alcoholism, and none had access to alcohol or nonprescribed drugs for the more than 6 months that followed their admission. All patients were receiving typical neuroleptics such as haloperidol, perphenazine, propericiazine, nemonapride, and chlorpromazine at the time of MRS examination (mean chlorpromazine equivalent, 617±399 mg/day),
+6 and 33 patients also were receiving anticholinergic agents such as biperiden or trihexyphenidyl. They had been ill for 14.9±7.8 years. A comparison group of 51 healthy subjects included hospital staff and university students (25 men and 26 women, mean age 35.5±7.9 years). None had a history of psychiatric or neurologic illness. All subjects were right-handed, as determined by the Edinburgh Inventory;
+7 a laterality score greater than 80 qualified them as right-handed.
+8 The Edinburgh Inventory score did not differ significantly between the patient and control groups (patient vs. control: 91.8±6.5 vs. 93.1±7.5;
t=1.027, df=113,
P=0.307). Nutritional condition was not systematically matched between groups. Subjects with total cholesterol greater than 240 mg/dl or abnormal electrolyte concentrations in routine blood chemistry screening were excluded. The definition of a positive FH was determined in accordance with the Family History Research Diagnostic Criteria.
+9 Patients whose first- or second-degree relatives had histories of schizophrenia, delusional disorder, schizophreniform disorder, or schizoaffective disorder were defined as having a positive FH. Diagnoses in these relatives were made on the basis of information from their treating psychiatrists or physicians. Age and gender were not significantly different between patients with and without FH (with FH vs. without FH: mean age, 38.4±5.7 vs. 36.0±7.5 years;
t=1.112, df=62,
P=0.271; gender, 7 men and 6 women vs. 27 men and 24 women; χ
2=0.003, df=1,
P=0.999). The Edinburgh Inventory score was similar between the groups (with FH vs. without FH: mean score 91.6±6.3 vs. 91.9±6.6,
t=0.159, df=62,
P=0.874). All subjects gave written informed consent for their participation in the study.