SA Stilo, M Di Forti, RM Murray - Neuropsychiatry, 2011 - search.proquest.com
The most important risk factor for schizophrenia is a positive family history, but only a minority of people with schizophrenia have an affected relative and no single gene of large …
SA Stilo, RM Murray - Current psychiatry reports, 2019 - Springer
Abstract Purpose of Review We review recent developments on risk factors in schizophrenia. Recent Findings The way we think about schizophrenia today is profoundly …
MC Clarke, I Kelleher, M Clancy, M Cannon - Psychiatric Clinics of North …, 2012 - Elsevier
This article gives an overview of genetic and environmental risk factors for schizophrenia. The presence of certain molecular, biological, and psychosocial factors at certain points in …
RM Murray, DJ Castle - New Oxford textbook of psychiatry, 2012 - cir.nii.ac.jp
抄録< p> One thing that is certain about the aetiology of schizophrenia is that there is no single cause. This might reflect the fact that the schizophrenia construct itself is …
Genetic, epidemiologic, and molecular studies concur that liability to schizophrenia is transmitted through the inheritance of a number of genes of relatively small effect, some of …
JH Gilmore - American Journal of Psychiatry, 2010 - Am Psychiatric Assoc
Understanding what causes schizophrenia is becoming harder and harder. We know that schizophrenia has genetic causes, since the most significant risk factor is having a first …
A Hodges, M Byrne, E Grant… - The British Journal of …, 1999 - cambridge.org
BackgroundThe Edinburgh High-Risk Study is designed to explore the underlying pathogenesis of schizophrenia. AimsTo establish the sample characteristics of the first 100 …
EC Johnstone, KP Ebmeier, P Miller… - The British Journal of …, 2005 - cambridge.org
BackgroundThe hypothesis that schizophrenia is neurodevelopmental was investigated in a prospective study of young people with a postulated 10–15% risk for the development of …
RM Murray, AM Reveley, P McGuffin - Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1986 - Elsevier
The genetic contribution to schizophrenia is the most clearly established etiologic factor. This article briefly reviews the evidence for a genetic influence as well as recent challenges …