2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2013.04.031
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Prenatal tobacco smoke exposure, risk of schizophrenia, and severity of positive/negative symptoms

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Cited by 26 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
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“…This is consistent with limited prior studies indicating that PEMS may elevate risk for psychotic symptoms/disorders (Spauwen et al, 2004; Zammit et al, 2009; Ekblad et al, 2010). We found a lower severity of deficit symptoms, which is inconsistent with the prior report indicating that PEMS was associated with greater negative symptom severity (Stathopoulou et al, 2013). …”
contrasting
confidence: 99%
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“…This is consistent with limited prior studies indicating that PEMS may elevate risk for psychotic symptoms/disorders (Spauwen et al, 2004; Zammit et al, 2009; Ekblad et al, 2010). We found a lower severity of deficit symptoms, which is inconsistent with the prior report indicating that PEMS was associated with greater negative symptom severity (Stathopoulou et al, 2013). …”
contrasting
confidence: 99%
“…PEMS could conceivably impact illness manifestation among individuals with psychotic disorders. Smith et al (2010) showed no association with symptom type or severity, or with symptom change across one year, among first-episode psychosis (FEP) patients, but Stathopoulou et al (2013) found that PEMS was related to greater severity of negative symptoms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While one study had found prenatal maternal smoking to be strongly correlated with increased tic severity, this may have been confounded by not taking SES into account (Mathews et al, 2006). Also in other neurodevelopmental disorders in which a role for maternal smoking had been implicated (Hultman et al, 2002; Kalkbrenner et al, 2012; Stathopoulou et al, 2013), studies conducted with larger sample sizes or with appropriate correction for confounding factors such as SES did not confirm an effect of smoking (Cannon et al, 2002; Knopik, 2009; Larsson et al, 2005; Lee et al, 2012). Still, there may be an effect of heavy maternal smoking (>10 cigarettes per day) on co-occurring ADHD (Motlagh et al, 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…We identified a priori several potential maternal/paternal, socioeconomic and offspring confounding variables based on previous literature in this area: mother's age at delivery, maternal education level, maternal social class, marital status, low income, maternal history of depression, exposure to influenza, use of cannabis, alcohol and illicit drugs during pregnancy, offspring sex, birth weight and gestation at delivery [10,11].…”
Section: Confounding Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%