Olfactory identification ability among schizophrenia patients, their first-degree relatives and healthy subjects.
Senichi FukudaKazutaka OhiDaisuke FujikaneKentaro TakaiAyumi KuramitsuKoji FujitaYukimasa MutoShunsuke SugiyamaToshiki ShioiriPublished in: The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry (2023)
Our results demonstrated that schizophrenia patients have impaired olfactory identification ability compared with first-degree relatives and healthy controls, and the impaired olfactory identification ability of first-degree relatives was intermediate between those in schizophrenia patients and healthy controls. Olfactory identification ability was relatively independent of clinical variables. Therefore, olfactory identification ability might be an intermediate phenotype for schizophrenia.