Searching for neuropathology: gliosis in schizophrenia

Tatiana P Schnieder, Andrew J Dwork, Tatiana P Schnieder, Andrew J Dwork

Abstract

The neuropathology of schizophrenia remains elusive. One indication of this elusiveness is that the literature, in contrast to that on the neuropathology of almost any other disease, deals predominantly with measures of normal structures rather than with the demonstration and characterization of pathological structures. An important exception to this trend has been the continued search, over four decades, for reactive glia. In this article, we review histological and radiological evidence for and against astrocytosis and microgliosis specifically associated with schizophrenia. The studies are generally limited by small samples, flawed designs, and potentially biased methods of counting cells. Interpretation of these studies is further complicated by the frequent presence of glial reactions in older individuals without psychiatric disease. Nonetheless, some of the positive findings in the literature cannot easily be dismissed. A sufficiently large autopsy study, weighted toward younger subjects, could provide a definitive answer, which if positive could be a major step toward finding an underlying pathological process.

Copyright © 2011 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

3
Iratkozz fel