Digoxin did not reduce overall mortality, but it reduced the rate of hospitalization both overall and for worsening heart failure. These findings define more precisely the role of digoxin in the management of chronic heart failure.
There are multiple genetic links between schizophrenia and a deficit of proline dehydrogenase (PRODH) enzyme activity. However, reports testing for an association of schizophrenia with the resulting proline elevation have been conflicting. The objectives of this study were to investigate whether hyperprolinemia is associated with schizophrenia, and to measure the relationship between plasma proline, and clinical features and symptoms of schizophrenia.
We performed a cross-sectional case-control study, comparing fasting plasma proline in 90 control subjects and 64 schizophrenic patients and testing for association of mild to moderate hyperprolinemia with schizophrenia. As secondary analyses, the relationship between hyperprolinemia and five measures of clinical onset, symptoms and outcome were investigated.
Patients had significantly higher plasma proline than matched controls (p<0.0001), and categorical analysis of gender adjusted hyperprolinemia showed a significant association with schizophrenia (OR 6.15, p=0.0003). Hyperprolinemic patients were significantly older at their first hospitalization (p=0.015 following correction for multiple testing). While plasma proline level was not related to total, positive or negative symptoms, hyperprolinemic status had a significant effect on length of hospital stay (p=0.005), following adjustment for race, BPRS score, and cross-sectional time from admission to proline measurement.
Mild to moderate hyperprolinemia is a significant risk factor for schizophrenia, and may represent an intermediate phenotype in the disease. Hyperprolinemic patients have a significantly later age of first psychiatric hospitalization, suggestive of later onset, and hospital stays 46% longer than non-hyperprolinemic subjects. These findings have implications in the etiology of schizophrenia, and for the clinical management of these patients.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a vital cofactor maintaining availability of the amine neurotransmitters [dopamine (DA), noradrenaline (NA), and serotonin (5-HT)], regulating the synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) by nitric oxide synthase (NOS), and stimulating and modulating the glutamatergic system (directly and indirectly). These BH4 properties and their potential relevance to schizophrenia led us to investigate the hypothesis of a study group (healthy controls, n = 37; schizophrenics, n = 154) effect on fasting plasma total biopterin levels (a measure of BH4). Study analysis showed a highly significant deficit of total biopterins for the schizophrenic sample after partialling out the effects of potential confounds of gender, age, ethnicity, neuroleptic use history and dose of current use, 24-hour dietary phenylalanine/protein ratio (a dietary variable relevant to BH4 synthesis), and plasma phenylalanine (which stimulates BH4 synthesis). A mean decrement of 34% in plasma total biopterins for schizophrenics from control values supports clinical relevance for the finding. In a subsample (21 controls and 23 schizophrenics), sequence analysis was done of the GTP cyclohydrolase I feedback regulatory gene and no mutations were found in the coding region of the gene. A deficiency of BH4 could lead to hypofunction of the systems of DA, NA, 5-HT, NOS/NO, and glutamate, all of which have been independently implicated in schizophrenia psychopathology. Further, evidence has been accumulating which implicates the critical interdependence of these neurotransmitter systems in schizophrenia; this concept, along with the present study finding of a biopterin deficit, suggests that further study of the BH4 system in schizophrenia is warranted and desirable.
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