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Authors' reply

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

I. E. C. Sommer
Affiliation:
Department of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 100, 3584 CX Utrecht, The Netherlands. E-mail: [email protected]
R. S. Kahn
Affiliation:
Department of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 100, 3584 CX Utrecht, The Netherlands. E-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

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Columns
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

We read with interest the results of the study by Dr Španiel et al. In parallel to our findings, they reported decreased language lateralisation in (twin) patients with schizophrenia compared with healthy (twin) controls. However, they did not report whether the decreased lateralisation in the patients resulted from increased activation of the right hemisphere, or from decreased activation of the left hemisphere.

This is an essential point, since decreased activation of frontal, temporal and parietal language areas in the left hemisphere of schizophrenia patients is frequently associated with decreased task performance (as reported by Reference Artiges, Martinot and VerdysArtiges et al, 2000). Increased language-related activation of right cerebral areas, in contrast, may reflect a failure to establish cerebral dominance, which may be a genetic predisposition to develop schizophrenia.

In our study (Sommer et al, 2004), the language tasks employed were selected to be very simple in order not to cause a difference in performance between patients and healthy subjects. Left hemispheric language activation was not lower in patients than in their co-twins, which, in our opinion, reflects equal task performance.

In the Španiel et al study, a verbal fluency task was employed, which is known to generate a difference in performance between schizophrenia patients and controls, and generally yields decreased activation of left frontal areas in patients (Reference Curtis, Bullmore and MorrisCurtis et al, 1999). This may explain why Španiel et al found lower lateralisation in patients compared with their co-twins.

Španiel et al mentioned that selection of co-twins without schizophrenia and of control pairs may have caused the difference between their results and ours, since the control twin pairs in their sample were selected not to have relatives with schizophrenia. This was, however, also the case in our sample. The second point of difference raised by Španiel et al is that the co-twins in their study had no psychiatric disorder. However, in our article we described an additional analysis comparing twins with schizophrenia with their co-twins after exclusion of all pairs from which the co-twins had psychiatric pathology, which yielded the same results as the analysis including the entire sample.

In sum, we find Dr Španiel et al's study an interesting contribution; in our opinion it is differences in the language activation tasks, rather than differences in sample selection, that are the cause of the differences in outcome between the studies.

Footnotes

EDITED BY KHALIDA ISMAIL

References

Artiges, E., Martinot, J. L., Verdys, M., et al (2000) Altered hemispheric functional dominance during word generation in negative schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 26, 709721.Google Scholar
Curtis, V. A., Bullmore, E. T., Morris, R. G., et al (1999) Attenuated frontal activation in schizophrenia may be task dependent. Schizophrenia Research, 37, 3544.Google Scholar
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