Many psychiatric disorders are associated with major cognitive deficits. However, it is uncertain whether these deficits develop as a result of psychiatric disorders and what shared risk factors might mediate this relationship. Here, we utilized the Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the complex causal relationship between nine major psychiatric disorders and three cognitive phenotypes, while also examining the potential mediating role of oxidative stress as a shared biological underpinning. Schizophrenia (SZ), major depressive disorder (MDD), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) showed a decreasing effect on cognitive performance, intelligence, and education, while bipolar disorder (BPD) increased educational attainment. MR-Clust results exhibit the shared genetic basis between SZ and other psychiatric disorders in relation to cognitive function. Furthermore, when oxidative stress was considered as a potential mediating factor, the associations between SZ and the three dimensions of cognition, as well as between MDD and intelligence and ADHD and intelligence, exhibited larger effect sizes than the overall. Mediation MR analysis also supported the causal effects between psychiatric disorders and cognition via oxidative stress traits, including carotene, vitamin E, bilirubin, and uric acid. Finally, summary-based MR identified 29 potential causal associations of oxidative stress genes with both cognitive performance and psychiatric disorders. Our findings highlight the importance of considering oxidative stress in understanding and potentially treating cognitive impairments associated with psychiatric conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox14020162 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Psychiatry
March 2025
Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR& Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CINS), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital - Mental Health Services CPH, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Importance: Maternal inflammation during pregnancy has been associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs), such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism, and cognitive deficits in early childhood. However, little is known about the contributions of a wider range of inflammatory proteins to this risk.
Objective: To determine whether maternal inflammatory proteins during pregnancy are associated with the risk of NDDs and executive functions (EF) in middle childhood and to identify protein patterns associated with NDDs and EF.
JAMA Psychiatry
March 2025
Clinical and Experimental Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
Importance: Expectancy effects are significant confounding factors in psychiatric randomized clinical trials (RCTs), potentially affecting the interpretation of study results. This narrative review is the first, to our knowledge, to explore the relationship between expectancy effects, compromised blinding integrity, and the effects of active treatment/placebo in psychiatric RCTs. Additionally, we present statistical and experimental approaches that may help mitigate the confounding impact of expectancy effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging Dis
March 2025
First Clinical Medical College, Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine, Harbin 150040, China.
Recent advances in microbial pathogen research have highlighted the potential of gut microbe-based microbial medicine. One of the most extensively studied biological pathways is the gut-brain axis, which has been shown to reverse neurological disorders. Evidence from animal-based studies of dysbiosis suggest complex behavioral changes, such as alterations in sociability and anxiety, can be modulated through gut microbiota.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAddict Biol
March 2025
Departament de Psicologia Bàsica, Clínica i Psicobiologia, Universitat Jaume I, Castellón, Spain.
Repetitive drug use results in enduring structural and functional changes in the brain. Addiction research has consistently revealed significant modifications in key brain networks related to reward, habit, salience, executive function, memory and self-regulation. Techniques like Voxel-based Morphometry have highlighted large-scale structural differences in grey matter across distinct groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
March 2025
Neuroscience and Medical Genetics Department, Meyer Children's Hospital IRCCS, Florence, Italy.
Objective: This study was undertaken to prospectively assess the frequency and type of psychiatric disorders (PDs) in pediatric surgical candidates and evaluate the effects of epilepsy surgery on their psychopathological profile.
Methods: This is a prospective controlled study. Psychopathology was assessed using both diagnostic interviews and questionnaires completed by clinicians, parents, and whenever possible, patients, at baseline (T0) and 1 year after surgery in operated patients (T1) and 1 year after the first evaluation in a control group of nonoperated patients (T1).
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