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Impairments of motor function among 7-year-old children with a familial risk of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder in Denmark: an observational cohort study

Owing to the genetic overlap between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, we aimed to assess domain-specific motor aberrations and disorder specificity among 7-year-old children with a familial risk of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder by comparing children in familial risk groups with each other and with children of control parents.

2017.06.01 | Annette Bang Rasmussen

Birgitte Klee Burton, MD, PhD, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Centre Copenhagen, Capital Region of Denmark

About the study

In the Danish High Risk and Resilience Study, we established a cohort of 7-year-old children with no, one, or two parents with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder in Denmark between Jan 1, 2013, and Jan 31, 2016. We matched children of parents diagnosed with schizophrenia to children of parents without schizophrenia on the basis of their home address, age, and sex. Even though we did not match children of parents with bipolar disorder directly to controls because of resource constraints, we only recruited children into the three groups who did not differ in terms of age, sex, and urbanicity. We investigated motor function in the children using the Movement Assessment Battery for Children–Second Edition. Motor function rates were masked to participants’ clinical risk status during assessments. We assessed the effects of familial risk group in a mixed-model analysis with repeated measures with an unstructured variance component matrix.

Children of parents with schizophrenia showed impaired motor performance compared with those of control parents in the subdomains of manual dexterity (mean difference –1·42 [95% CI –2·08 to –0·77]; p<0·0001) and balance (–1·38 [–2·03 to –0·72]; p<0·0001), but not of aiming and catching (–0·39 [–0·97 to 0·19]; p=0·18). Children of parents with bipolar disorder did not show any significant difference in motor performance to children of control parents  in the subdomains of manual dexterity, balance, and aiming and catching. Comparison of familial risk groups of the two mental disorders revealed no significant differences in the subdomains of manual dexterity, balance  or aiming and catching.

The article “Impairments of motor function among children with a familial risk of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder at 7 years old in Denmark: an observational cohort study” was published in Lancet Psychiatry. 2017 May;4(5) 400-408.

Facts about the study

  • This study included 514 children aged 7 with no, one, or two parents with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder in Denmark between Jan 1, 2013, and Jan 31, 2016.
  • Motor abnormalities in children with a familial risk of schizophrenia are specific at 7 years of age with respect to fine motor function and balance, but non-specific with respect to familial risk of bipolar disorder.
  • Clinicians should be aware of motor symptoms and refer children with definite motor problems (below the fifth percentile) to a child physiotherapist.

Further information

Birgitte Klee Burton, MD, PhD, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Centre, Capital Region of Denmark, Glostrup. E-mail: Birgitte.Klee.Burton@regionh.dk 

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