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Psychotic-like experiences in the general population: characterizing a high-risk group for psychosis.

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Version 2 2021-08-16, 07:25
Version 1 2019-11-22, 17:11
journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-16, 07:25 authored by Ian KelleherIan Kelleher, Mary CannonMary Cannon

Recent research shows that psychotic symptoms, or psychotic-like experiences (PLEs), are reported not only by psychosis patients but also by healthy members of the general population. Healthy individuals who report these symptoms are considered to represent a non-clinical psychosis phenotype, and have been demonstrated to be at increased risk of schizophrenia-spectrum disorder. Converging research now shows that this non-clinical psychosis phenotype is familial, heritable and covaries with familial schizophrenia-spectrum disorder. A review of the research also shows that the non-clinical phenotype is associated extensively with schizophrenia-related risk factors, including social, environmental, substance use, obstetric, developmental, anatomical, motor, cognitive, linguistic, intellectual and psychopathological risk factors. The criterion and construct validity of the non-clinical psychosis phenotype with schizophrenia demonstrates that it is a valid population in which to study the aetiology of psychosis. Furthermore, it suggests shared genetic variation between the clinical and non-clinical phenotypes. Much remains to be learned about psychosis by broadening the scope of research to include the non-clinical psychosis phenotype.

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This article is also available from Cambridge Journals at http://journals.cambridge.org/

Published Citation

Kelleher I, Cannon M. Psychotic-like experiences in the general population: characterizing a high-risk group for psychosis. Psychological Medicine. 2011;41(1):1-6.

Publication Date

2011-01-01

PubMed ID

20624328

Department/Unit

  • Beaumont Hospital
  • Psychiatry

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