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Childhood Attention Issues Linked to Psychosis Risk

Childhood attention issues may raise the risk of developing psychosis later in life, highlighting the need for early intervention and support.

by Colleen Fleiss on October 30, 2024 at 10:23 PM

Children genetically predisposed to neuropsychiatric and cognitive disorders are more likely to experience severe psychotic symptoms and attention problems, stated new study.


What is Psychosis

Psychosis () is a mental condition that causes a person to lose touch with reality. According to researchers from the University of California - Los Angeles, who analysed data from about 10,000 children for over six years, besides genetic makeup, attentional variability influenced the risk of broader psychotic-like symptoms as children grow into adolescence.

‘#Childhood attention problems could be a red flag for future #mentalhealth issues? New research suggests a link between #attentionissues and #psychotic-like experiences in adulthood. #psychosis’

In addition, attention span variability partially acted as an intermediate between the relationships between genetic risk for neuropsychiatric disorders and the expression of psychotic-like symptoms.

Attention span issues explained 4-16 per cent of these associations, revealed the findings, published in Nature Mental Health. "If attention completely explained the relationship between genetic predisposition and psychotic-like experiences, that percentage would be 100 per cent," said Sarah Chang, a neuroscience graduate student at UCLA.

The researchers noted that the majority of youth who experience psychotic-like symptoms will not go on to develop schizophrenia. These events raise the chance of a future psychotic disorder and mental illness. The study findings, based on cognitive, brain, and genetic data from more than 10,000 participants, may help lead to future molecular targets that could be targets for early intervention for psychosis.

The study also involved the use of polygenic scores for neuropsychiatric conditions. These scores summarise the combined effect of a large number of genetic variants to estimate a person's risk for developing the disorder. However, a limitation of using the polygenic scores is that they mostly rely on genetic data from people with European ancestry.

Reference:

  1. Overview - Psychosis - (https:www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/psychosis/overview/t)
Source: IANS

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