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  • Toward a unified theory of ...
    Misiak, Błażej; Krefft, Maja; Bielawski, Tomasz; Moustafa, Ahmed A.; Sąsiadek, Maria M.; Frydecka, Dorota

    Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews, April 2017, 2017-Apr, 2017-04-00, 20170401, Letnik: 75
    Journal Article

    •Childhood traumatic events increase a risk of psychosis.•Childhood trauma might be associated with a specific psychosis manifestation.•Childhood adversities trigger specific biological alterations in psychosis.•Childhood trauma might predict poor prognosis in psychotic disorders.•Psychosis with positive history of childhood trauma might be a distinct phenotype. There is a growing body of research focused on the relationship between childhood trauma and the risk of developing psychosis. Numerous studies, including many large-scale population-based studies, controlling for possible mediating variables, provide persuasive evidence of a dose-response association and are indicative of a causal relationship. Existing evidence supports the specificity model, showing differential associations between particular adversities and clinical symptoms, with cumulative adversity causing less favorable clinical and functional outcomes in psychotic patients. To date, several psychological and biological models have been proposed to search for underlying developmental trajectories leading to the onset of psychosis, influencing psychopathological manifestation and negative functional outcomes due to a history of childhood trauma. In this article, we provide a unified review on the relationship between childhood trauma and psychosis by integrating results of epidemiological, clinical, neuropsychological and biological studies. The question whether psychosis with a positive history of childhood trauma should be considered as a new psychotic phenotype, requiring specific therapeutic interventions, warrants further investigation.