Abstract

Psychosis is the most common neuropsychiatric side-effect of dopaminergic therapy in Parkinson’s disease (PD). It is still unknown which factors determine individual proneness to psychotic symptoms. Schizotypy is a multifaceted personality trait related to psychosis-proneness and dopaminergic neurotransmission in healthy subjects. We investigated whether (1) PD patients exhibit lower schizotypy than controls and (2) dopamine-related neuropsychiatric side-effects can be predicted by higher schizotypy. In this cross-sectional study, we used the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences in 56 PD patients (12 women, mean ± sd age: 61 ± 11 years) receiving their usual dopaminergic medication and 32 age-matched healthy controls (n = 32; 18 women, mean ± sd age: 57 ± 6 years). We further compared schizotypy scores of patients with (n = 18, 32.1%) and without previously experienced psychosis. We found that patients exhibited lower schizotypy than controls. Further, patients with a history of psychosis exhibited higher schizotypy than patients without these symptoms. Using an information theoretic measure and a machine learning approach, we show that schizotypy yields the greatest predictive value for dopamine-associated hallucinations compared to other patient characteristics and disease related factors. Our results indicate an overlap between neural networks associated with schizotypy and the pathophysiology of PD and a relationship between schizotypy and psychotic side-effects of dopaminergic medication.

Highlights

  • Psychosis is the most common neuropsychiatric side-effect of dopaminergic therapy in Parkinson’s disease (PD)

  • We investigate whether PD patients with higher values in positive schizotypy are more prone to the psychotic side effects of dopaminergic medication

  • We found that PD patients exhibit lower schizotypy than age-matched healthy controls

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Summary

Introduction

Psychosis is the most common neuropsychiatric side-effect of dopaminergic therapy in Parkinson’s disease (PD) It is still unknown which factors determine individual proneness to psychotic symptoms. Schizotypy describes a constellation of personality traits with four dimensions measuring perceptual aberrations and unusual ideation (positive dimension), reductions in emotional, motivational, physical and social function (negative dimension), cognitive or associated slippage related to formal thought disorder (disorganized dimension), as well as eccentric, impulsive and nonconformist behavior and speech patterns (impulsive/ nonconformist dimension)[20,21] Of these facets, positive schizotypy has been linked to proneness for psychosis as well as for psychotic-like experiences in healthy individuals, while negative and disorganized schizotypy are related to schizophrenia-liability e.g.22–24

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