LETTERS TO EDITOR
Functional psychosis in childhood and adolescence
Dear Editors,
We read with great interest the Supplement 2 of the Jornal de Pediatria about Mental Health, especially the paper entitled "Functional Psychosis in Childhood and Adolescence" by Tengan & Maia.1 They discussed in this text an important issue in child psychiatry, the distinction between childhood-onset schizophrenia and autism.
Since the works of Kolvin & Rutter,2 autism was reliably separated from early-onset schizophrenia, becoming one of the best-validated distinctions in child psychiatry, but a striking feature of childhood-onset schizophrenia samples relative to adult-onset schizophrenia is the higher rate of early language, social, and motor developmental abnormalities. Pre-morbid social impairment was the most common feature, present in 50-87% of childhood-onset schizophrenia cases across five independent research centers.3
The full syndromes of schizophrenia and autism seem to be distinct, however it is possible that a subgroup of those with childhood-onset schizophrenia and those with autism share a similar genetic compound.4 Yan et al.5 reported a balanced translocation between chromosomes 1 and 7 in a boy with childhood-onset schizophrenia. The breakpoints were at the short arm of chromosome 1 (region p22) and at the long arm of chromosome 7 (region q21). This report is very interesting given a previous case of chromosomal rearrangement involving chromosomes 1, 7 and 21 in an autistic boy where the breakpoint at chromosome 1 was also in the region p22.6 These findings make the breakpoints of chromosomes 1 and 7 likely sites for molecular genetic studies. These regions may present genes which may be involved in the etiopathology of childhood-onset schizophrenia and autism, thus these two disorders, apparently so distinct, may present a common biological basis in some cases, consisting of phenotypic variants of a very early onset illness.3
Quirino Cordeiro
Postgraduate Program, Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
E-mail:E-mail: qcordeiro@yahoo.com
Homero Vallada
Associate professor, Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
E-mail:E-mail: hvallada@usp.br
References
1. Tengan K, Maia AK. Functional psychosis in childhood and adolescence. J Pediatr (Rio J). 2004;80(2 Suppl):S3-10.
2. Rutter M. Childhood schizophrenia reconsidered. J Autism Child Schizophr. 1972;2:315-7.
3. Sporn AL, Addington AM, Gogtay N, Ordoñez AE, Gornick M, Clasen L, et al. Pervasive developmental disorder and childhood-onset schizophrenia: comorbid disorder or a phenotypic variant of a very early onset illness? Biol Psychiatry. 2004;55:989-94.
4. Thapar A, Scourfield J. Childhood disorders. In: McGuffin P, Owen M, Gottesman II, editors. Psychiatric Genetics and Genomics. 1st ed. New York: Oxford University Press; 2002. p. 147-180.
5. Yan WL, Guan XY, Green ED, Nicolson R, Yap TK, Zhang J, et al. Childhood-onset schizophrenia/autistic disorder and t(1;7) reciprocal translocation: identification of a BAC contig spanning the translocation breakpoint at 7q21. Am J Med Genet. 2000;96:749-53.
6. Lopreiato JO, Wulfsberg EA. A complex chromosome rearrangement in a boy with autism. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1992;13:281-3.
5. Yan WL, Guan XY, Green ED, Nicolson R, Yap TK, Zhang J, et al. Childhood-onset schizophrenia/autistic disorder and t(1;7) reciprocal translocation: identification of a BAC contig spanning the translocation breakpoint at 7q21. Am J Med Genet. 2000;96:749-53.
Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
01 Dec 2004 -
Date of issue
2004