상세검색
최근 검색어 전체 삭제
다국어입력
즐겨찾기0
커버이미지 없음
SCOPUS 학술저널

Schizophrenia, Cancer and Obstetric Complications in an Evolutionary Perspective-An Empirically Based Hypothesis

  • 10

Objective-Patients diagnosed with schizophrenia have reduced fecundity and premature mortality (both accidental and violent) with no obvious compensatory advantages among kin. The prevalence of the disorder is around 0.7/1%, higher than the expected prevalence of spontaneous mutations. Genes favoring schizophrenia may have been positively selected in the environment of evolutionary adaptation. Literature on potential adaptive genes is reviewed within an evolutionary framework. Methods-Literature search on major scientific search engine (PubMed/Medline, Ovid/PsychInfo) on papers aimed at investigating potential pathways justifying a mutation-selection balanced model. Findings are presented with a narrative touch to favor readability and understanding. Results-Reduced incidence of cancer in both patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and their siblings was reported worldwide. Such findings are notable given higher cancer risk factors in schizophrenia, i.e., smoking, alcohol abuse, obesity, poor diet, and poor adherence to therapy. Some genes involved in cancer proliferation might as well confer protective advantage in immune-surveillance, inflammation, vascular proliferation or apoptosis that otherwise will adversely affect early neurodevelopment. Conclusion-Evidence that reduced risk of certain somatic diseases is associated with schizophrenia is quite significant to progress in the evolutionary epidemiological analysis of psychopathology.

INTRODUCTION

MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY IN SCHIZOPHRENIA

CANCER AND SCHIZOPHRENIA

GENETICS, OBSTETRIC COMPLICATIONS, AND SCHIZOPHRENIA: THE MISSING LINK?

POTENTIAL PATHWAYS IN THE REDUCED RISK OF CANCER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA

THE ROLE OF DEVIANCE IN NEURODEVELOPMENT

EVIDENCE FOR ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION OF GENES INVOLVED IN SCHIZOPHRENIA

IMPLICATIONS FOR RESEARCH

REFERENCES

로딩중