Reduced concentrations of galanin, arginine vasopressin, neuropeptide Y and peptide YY in the temporal cortex but not in the hypothalamus of brains from schizophrenics.
Frederiksen. S O SO; Ekman. R R; Gottfries. C G CG; Widerlöv. E E; Jonsson. S S
Key Findings
- Galanin, AVP, NPY and PYY were significantly lower in the temporal cortex of schizophrenic brains
- DSIP levels in the temporal cortex were slightly lower but not statistically significant
- No differences in any of these neuropeptides were seen in the hypothalamus, and antipsychotic treatment didn’t account for the changes
Practical Outcomes
- This research doesn’t give direct advice for health optimization or supplement use. It suggests DSIP may be altered in certain brain disorders, but there’s no evidence to change dosing or protocols for longevity or performance based on this study.
Summary
A study looked at brain tissue from people with schizophrenia and found that several brain chemicals, including DSIP, were lower in a part of the brain called the temporal cortex, but not in the hypothalamus. The drop in DSIP was only a trend, not a clear cut difference, and medication didn’t explain the changes.
Abstract
Postmortem investigations were performed in brains from 14 schizophrenic patients and 21 controls matched for age and autopsy latency. Concentrations of galanin, delta-sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP), corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), arginine vasopressin (AVP), neuropeptide Y (NPY) and peptide YY (PYY) were determined in the hypothalamus and grey matter from the temporal cortex. A significant positive correlation between age and the concentrations of galanin and CRF was found in the controls. No sex differences were found except a higher mean of CRF in the hypothalamus of the women. In the temporal cortex of the schizophrenic brains, galanin, AVP, NPY and PYY were significantly reduced. DSIP reduction only bordered on significance. CRF was not reduced. Comparing neuroleptic-treated vs non-treated schizophrenics, the treatment factor could not explain the reduced concentrations of neuropeptides in the temporal lobe. A comparison of controls with schizophrenics showed no significant differences in hypothalamic neuropeptide concentrations.
Study Information
pubmed
1991
1991-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1600-0447.1991.tb05539.x
102
28