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Harvard Review of Psychiatry

Review Article: PDF Only

Freedman, Robert MD1,2,†; Adler, Lawrence E. MD1; Bickford, Paula PhD2; Byerley, William MD3; Coon, Hilary PhD3; Cullum, Munro C. PhD1; Griffith, Jay M. MD4; Harris, Josette G. PhD1; Leonard, Sherry PhD2; Miller, Christine MS2; Myles-Worsley, Marina PhD3; Nagamoto, Herbert T. MD1; Rose, Greg PhD2; Waldo, Merilyne PhD1

1Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado, School of Medicine and Denver VA Medical Center, Denver, Colo

2Department of Pharmacology, University of Colorado School of Medicine and Denver VA Medical Center, Denver, Colo

3Department of Psychiatry, University of Utah, School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

4Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas, Southwestern Medical School and Dallas VA Medical Center, Dallas, Texas

Supported by the Veterans Administration Medical Research Seruice, NARSAD, the Stanley Foundation, and USPHS grants MH-38321, MH-42643, MH-44212, MH-00728, and RR-00051.

Presented at the December 1993 meeting of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Honolulu, Hawaii.

Original manuscript received 21 March 1994; reuised manuscript received 23 May 1994, accepted for publication 1 July 1994.

Reprint requests: Robert Freedman, Department of Psychiatry C-268-71, University of Colorado School of Medicine, 4200 E. Ninth Ave., Denver, CO, 80262

Abstract

Patients with schizophrenia often cannot respond to important features of their environment and filter out irrelevant stimuli. This dysfunction could be related to an underlying defect in inhibition-i.e., the brain's ability to alter its sensitivity to repeated stimuli. One of the neuronal mechanisms responsible for such inhibitory gating involves the activation of cholinergic nicotinic receptors in the hippocampus. These receptors are diminished in many specimens of hippocampal brain tissue obtained postmortem from schizophrenic patients. In living schizophrenic patients, stimulation of cholinergic receptors by nicotine transiently restores inhibitory gating of evoked responses to sensory stimuli. Many people with schizophrenia are heavy smokers, but the properties of the nicotinic receptor favor only short-term activation, which may explain why cigarette smoking is only a transient symptomatic remedy. This paper reviews the clinical phenomenology of inhibitory gating deficits in people with schizophrenia, the neurobiology of such gating mechanisms, and the evidence that some individuals with the disorder may have a heritable deficit in the nicotinic cholinergic receptors involved in this neurobiological function. Inhibitory gating deficits are only partly normalized by neuroleptic drugs and are thus a target for new therapeutic strategies for schizophrenia.

© 1994 President and Fellows of Harvard College