Abstract

Schizophrenic patients (DSM-III-R) were consecutively recruited and 39 were included. Twenty-one were first-episode and 18 were chronic schizophrenic patients. Thirty of the patients were on neuroleptic medication. Thirty-three parents were included, of whom nine were classified as `family history positive' and 22 as `family history negative' of a disposition to psychosis. Fifty-five healthy controls volunteered. The subjects were investigated according to a protocol divided into neurological signs and psychomotor performance (finger-tapping rate, Purdue pegboard test, pronation–supination test, gait and hand-grasp strength). Seventy-eight percent of the patients and 7% of the controls were classified as globally aberrant in signs. The patients and their parents, classified as `family history positive', exhibited a similar laterality pattern in a finger-tapping test improving performance with the preferred hand, significantly different from the performance of the `family history negative' parents and normal subjects. Duration of illness, neuroleptic medication and negative symptoms were not related to the occurrence of neurological signs and psychomotor performance. These findings indicate that neurological aberrations are present at the onset of illness and that hereditary factors are associated with motor laterality.

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