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Cognitive deficit is a core symptom of schizophrenia (SZ), but its pathological mechanism is poorly understood and the treatment effect is poor. The excitatory-inhibitory microcircuit (E-I) function imbalance formed by inhibitory interneurons and excitatory pyramidal cells in the cerebral cortex is a new mechanism of cognitive deficits in SZ discovered in recent years. Cortical E-I is expected to be a new target for the treatment of cognitive deficits in SZ. Paired transcranial magnetic stimulation (ppTMS)-induced intracortical inhibition (ICI) is dependent on cortical E-I functional integrity. We found that ICI deficiency is stable in SZ and is closely related to cognitive function. Therefore, ICI is likely to be a system-level biomarker for cognitive deficits caused by E-I imbalance. However, no study has yet explored the genetic basis of ICI and its impact on the occurrence, development and treatment response of cognitive deficits in SZ. Based on this, we intend to verify the value of ppTMS-induced ICI as a biomarker of E-I imbalance in SZ patients and normal controls at different stages: 1. To explore the correlation of ICI with multidimensional cognitive deficits and E-I pathway genes; 2. To explore ICI Combining candidate genes and serum inflammatory factors can predict whether TMS can improve the efficacy of cognitive deficits, and can be used for precise treatment of SZ cognitive deficits at the level of pathological mechanisms.
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Study 1. In schizophrenia patients at different stages and normal controls, ppTMS-induced M1 intracortical inhibition was used as a candidate biomarker to comprehensively analyze its correlation with cognitive deficits in the seven dimensions of schizophrenia;
Study 2. In patients with schizophrenia and normal controls, to investigate whether there is a correlation between ppTMS-induced intracortical suppression in the M1 area and susceptibility genes that can regulate the function of the E-I microcircuit;
Study 3. Intermittent theta-burst transcranial magnetic stimulation (iTBS) or sham stimulation intervention on the left dlPFC in patients with schizophrenia, analysis of the efficacy of iTBS in improving cognition and intracortical inhibition indicators at baseline and during the treatment interval and treatment The relationship between post-variation and E-I microcircuit function-related susceptibility genes and intracortical inhibition to predict the cognitive efficacy of iTBS.
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200 participants in 3 patient groups
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Weiqing Liu, Ph.D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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