IBRO Neuroscience Reports (Jun 2023)
Investigating the symptomatic and morphological changes in the brain based on pre and post-treatment: A critical review from clinical to neuroimaging studies on schizophrenia
Abstract
Pharmacological treatment for schizophrenia has been a long-standing concern. As a severe neuropsychological illness, schizophrenia is always a challenging disorder to unravel its pathophysiology. Since it exhibits both positive and negative symptoms, such as hallucination and delusion, as well as social isolation and cognitive impairment, following the symptomatic changes is a crucial task for clinicians. Although various pharmacological treatments are available in the form of antipsychotics, however, their actual consequences need to be examined with the observable changes in symptoms as well as the unobservable changes in brain functioning. This study is a first of its kind to critically investigate both clinical and neuroimaging studies to find out the changes being observed in schizophrenia patients after clinical intervention with various antipsychotics. We observed several symptomatic changes being reported in clinical studies incorporating clinical trials of various first-generation and second-generation antipsychotic drugs. Alongside, we encapsulated several neuroimaging studies showing functional and structural changes in the brain of schizophrenia patients triggered by a variety of drugs. The basal ganglia, frontal lobe, temporal lobe, cuneus, and middle occipital gyrus are some of the notable brain regions that were observed to show subtle functional and structural changes. This critical review paper may pave the way for future research into the study of the pathological and morphological changes in the brains of schizophrenia patients as they progress through the course of medicinal therapy.