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Inicio Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental (English Edition) Difficulties in delivery and depressive symptomatology in schizophrenia
Journal Information
Vol. 14. Issue 1.
Pages 66-68 (January - March 2021)
Vol. 14. Issue 1.
Pages 66-68 (January - March 2021)
Scientific letter
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Difficulties in delivery and depressive symptomatology in schizophrenia
Dificultades en el parto y sintomatología depresiva en la esquizofrenia
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Gisela Mezquidaa,b,c,d,
Corresponding author
mezquida@clinic.cat

Corresponding author.
, Emilio Fernández-Egeab,e,f, Devi Treeng, Anna Manéb,h, Daniel Bergéb,i, George Savuliche, Leticia García-Álvarezb, María Paz García-Portillab,j, Julio Bobesb,j, Miguel Bernardoa,b,c,d, Clemente García-Rizoa,b,c,d
a Unidad de Esquizofrenia, Instituto de Neurociencias, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
b Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Spain
c Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain
d Departamento de Medicina, Universidad de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
e Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
f Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom
g Instituto de Neuropsiquiatría y Adicciones, Hospital del Mar, Barcelona, Spain
h Instituto Hospital del Mar de Investigación Médica (IMIM)-Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Neurociencias, Psiquiatría, Barcelona, Spain
i Instituto de Neuropsiquiatría y Adicciones, Parc de Salut Mar, Instituto Hospital del Mar de Investigación Médica (IMIM), Barcelona, Spain
j Departamento de Psiquiatría, Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo, Spain
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Tables (1)
Table 1. Presence of difficulties in delivery and demographic and clinical characteristics.
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Schizophrenia is a complex disorder characterized by a wide range of symptomatology including positive (e.g. delusions, hallucinations) and negative (e.g. apathy, avolition) symptoms associated with increased medical morbidity and early mortality.1 The current literature describes its origins as a gene plus environmental disorder, in which obstetric complications are a major risk factor.2 However, obstetric complications are typically quantified as a homogeneous entity (i.e. a dichotomous variable regarding its presence or absence). Our previous study highlighted its heterogeneity,3 suggesting that different patterns of obstetric complications were associated with different birth weights, an outcome with further cognitive4 and metabolic implications.5 In between those, difficulties in delivery have been correlated a higher prevalence of psychosis in the offspring6 suggesting the activation of specific genes involved in neurovascular function or regulated by hypoxia.7

We aimed to evaluate if different patterns of obstetric complications are associated with a specific clinical pattern in stable patients diagnosed with schizophrenia.

Ninety-eight patients were included from a multi-center cross-sectional study of negative symptoms in schizophrenia. The Lewis-Murray scale was used to evaluate obstetric complications and stratified our sample into three subgroups as suggested by Cannon et al.2 Two groups were characterized by complications during the gestational period, while the other group was characterized by difficulties in delivery (i.e. premature rupture of membranes or pre-labor rupture of membranes; duration of delivery over 36 h or below 3 h; prolapsed umbilical cord; complicated cesarean; abnormal fetal presentation; use of forceps; and incubation for over 4 weeks).

Patients were clinically evaluated with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), the Brief Negative Symptom Scale (BNSS) and the Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia (CDSS). They were compared with non-paired Student’s t-test, Mann-Whitney U Test or X2 for comparison of proportions with SPSS v23.0.

All local research ethic committees approved the study.

Patients were either grouped into having difficulties in delivery (N = 26) or not (N = 72). We found no significant differences in general demographic and clinical variables (see Table 1). However, significant differences were found in three specific items from the general psychopathology subscale from the PANSS, with significant differences in anxiety: patients with difficulties in delivery (3.1; SD 1.2) and without (2.4; SD 1.0) (p=0.003); guilt feelings: mean in patients with difficulties (2.5; SD 1.4) and without (1.7; SD 1.1) (p=0.003), and unusual thought content: mean in the group with difficulties in delivery (2.3; SD 1.2) and without (1.7; SD 1.1) (p=0.003). We also found significant differences in two specific items from the CDSS: in guilty ideas of reference: mean in patients with difficulties (0.5; SD 0.7) and without (0.2; SD 0.4) (p=0.001), and in pathological guilt: mean in patients with difficulties in delivery (0.6; SD 0.8) and without (0.2; SD 0.4) (p=0.002).

Table 1.

Presence of difficulties in delivery and demographic and clinical characteristics.

  Without difficultiesin deliveryN = 72  With difficultiesin deliveryN = 26  p value 
Age (SD)  33.9 (7.9)  33.6 (10.4)  0.880 
Gender (%): MalesFemales  6535  6238  0.773 
Antipsychotic dose (SD)(chlorpromazine equivalents)  407.3 (388.4)(N = 70)  1340.2 (3717.9)(N = 23)  0.167 
PANSS - Positive (SD)  11.7 (4.6)  13.0 (4.5)  0.231 
PANSS - Negative (SD)  18.3 (5.7)  18.6 (6.0)  0.854 
PANSS - Total (SD)  60.3 (15.4)  65.4 (18.2)  0.171 
PANSS - General (SD)  30.1 (8.3)  33.9 (10.2)  0.068 
BNSS (SD)  26.8 (12.8)  29.7 (15.9)  0.345 
CDSS (SD)  2.7 (3.0)  4.8 (5.4)  0.154 

SD: standard deviation; PANSS: Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; BNSS: Brief Negative Symptom Scale; CDSS: Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia.

As brain maturation is extremely sensitive to timing during gestation and perinatal period, we included gender as a potential confounding factor. A general linear model analysis was conducted with the significant items as dependent variables, with gender, and the presence of difficulties in delivery (dichotomous variable yes/no) as independent variables. When considering total general psychopathology from PANSS and specifically anxiety, guilt feelings and unusual thought content items, and the total CDSS symptomatology and specifically guilty ideas of reference and pathological guilt as the dependent variables, they were significantly associated with the presence of difficulties in delivery (total general psychopathology from the PANSS p = 0.05; anxiety p = 0.002; guilt feelings p = 0.003; unusual thought content p = 0.025; total CDSS p = 0.017; guilty ideas of reference p = 0.002 and pathological guilt p = 0.002) after adjusting for Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons. Gender was significantly associated only in PANSS general psychopathology total score (p=0.011) and in the anxiety item specifically (p=0.026).

Our results confirm that a specific pattern of obstetric complications, such as difficulties in delivery, are associated with more severe clinical symptomatology, mainly depressive, with specific significance in guilt in a sample of clinically-stable outpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia. Of particular interest, following a previous study,8 the CDSS has been analyzed suggesting two separate factors, depression-hopelessness and guilt,9 with the last one being positively correlated with the PANSS General Score and interpreted as a cognitive factor, both measures associated with delivery difficulties in our sample. Difficulties in delivery are associated with a higher risk of psychosis based on a gene*environmental model suggesting the importance of hypoxia associated with a problematic labor.7 Another important consequence of delivery difficulties, cesarean section, is associated with lower cognitive performance.6 One important limitation is that patients were categorized according to the presence or absence of risk factors grouped into three categories. As such, the presence of those factors did not exclude the presence of other group factors (having obstetric complications in the other two groups studied), so other described events might have affected the results.

Our results highlight that obstetric complications are a heterogeneous entity in the outcome of schizophrenia and so its specification might help understand its complex heterogeneity.3

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Please cite this article as: Mezquida G, Fernández-Egea E, Treen D, Mané A, Bergé D, Savulich G, et al. Dificultades en el parto y sintomatología depresiva en la esquizofrenia. Rev Psiquiatr Salud Ment (Barc.). 2021;14:66–68.

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