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Diet and Psychosis: A Scoping Review.

Neuropsychobiology
January 1, 2020
Monique Aucoin et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleScoping ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to identify nutritional interventions, including sulforaphane, for preventing or treating mental health symptoms in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD).

Results Summary

The study found observational evidence linking sulforaphane and other phytonutrients to potential benefits in SSD, though experimental data on its efficacy were not detailed.

Population

Patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (28)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
poorer quality dietary patterns
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#1
higher intake of refined carbohydrates
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#2
higher intake of total fat
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#3
lower intake or levels of fibre
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#4
lower intake or levels of ω-3 fatty acids
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#5
lower intake or levels of ω-6 fatty acids
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#6
lower intake or levels of vegetables
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#7
lower intake or levels of fruit
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#8
lower intake or levels of vitamin B12
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#9
lower intake or levels of vitamin B6
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#10
lower intake or levels of folate
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#11
lower intake or levels of vitamin C
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#12
lower intake or levels of zinc
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#13
lower intake or levels of selenium
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and
#14
food allergy and sensitivity
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
illustrates a role of
#15
microbiome composition
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
illustrates a role of
#16
L-theanine
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
illustrates a role of
#17
sulforaphane
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
illustrates a role of
#18
resveratrol
increase
psychotic disorders
patients with SSD
-
illustrates a role of
#19
healthy diet patterns
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#20
vitamin B12
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#21
vitamin B6
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#22
folate
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#23
zinc
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#24
serine
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#25
lysine
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#26
glycine
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#27
tryptophan
decrease
mental health symptoms in SSD
patients with SSD
-
demonstrated benefit using
#28
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) represent a cluster of severe mental illnesses. Diet has been identified as a modifiable risk factor and opportunity for intervention in many physical illnesses and more recently in mental illnesses such as unipolar depression; however, no dietary guidelines exist for patients with SSD. OBJECTIVE: This review sought to systematically scope the existing literature in order to identify nutritional interventions for the prevention or treatment of mental health symptoms in SSD as well as gaps and opportunities for further research. METHODS: This review followed established methodological approaches for scoping reviews including an extensive a priori search strategy and duplicate screening. Because of the large volume of results, an online program (Abstrackr) was used for screening and tagging. Data were extracted based on the dietary constituents and analyzed. RESULTS: Of 55,330 results identified by the search, 822 studies met the criteria for inclusion. Observational evidence shows a connection between the presence of psychotic disorders and poorer quality dietary patterns, higher intake of refined carbohydrates and total fat, and lower intake or levels of fibre, ω-3 and ω-6 fatty acids, vegetables, fruit, and certain vitamins and minerals (vitamin B12 and B6, folate, vitamin C, zinc, and selenium). Evidence illustrates a role of food allergy and sensitivity as well as microbiome composition and specific phytonutrients (such as L-theanine, sulforaphane, and resveratrol). Experimental studies have demonstrated benefit using healthy diet patterns and specific vitamins and minerals (vitamin B12 and B6, folate, and zinc) and amino acids (serine, lysine, glycine, and tryptophan). DISCUSSION: Overall, these findings were consistent with many other bodies of knowledge about healthy dietary patterns. Many limitations exist related to the design of the individual studies and the ability to extrapolate the results of studies using dietary supplements to dietary interventions (food). Dietary recommendations are presented as well as recommendations for further research including more prospective observational studies and intervention studies that modify diet constituents or entire dietary patterns with statistical power to detect mental health outcomes.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
DietHumansNutritional Physiological PhenomenaPsychotic DisordersSchizophrenia
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy65/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations63
Citations/Year12.6
Relative Citation Ratio5.32
NIH Percentile93.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.54
Normalized Score0.61
Related Supplements
Diet and Psychosis: A Scoping Review. | Panacea Index