Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T02:57:38.078Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Letter to the Editor: Oxytocin and empathy to pain in schizophrenia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2014

R. T. Abed*
Affiliation:
Ministry of Justice, Sheffield, UK
M. J. Abbas
Affiliation:
Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, Leicester, UK
*
Author for correspondence: R. T. Abed FRCPsych, Ministry of Justice, Sheffield, UK. (Email: abedrt@btinternet.com)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

The findings of Abu-Akel et al. (Reference Abu-Akel, Fischer-Shofty, Levkovitz, Decety and Shamay-Tsoory2014) were of considerable interest to us. We have proposed that in-group–out-group dynamics have aetiological significance in schizophrenia. We hypothesized that a sensitivity or intolerance towards out-group members resulting from an interaction between social environmental factors (abundance of out-group members in the social environment or paucity of contact with kin/in-group members or a combination of both) and individual characteristics (difficulty in re-assigning out-group individuals as in-group members or having a high threshold for designating individuals as in-group) results in dysregulation and aberrant connectivity in critical brain centres, leading to schizophrenia (Abed & Abbas, Reference Abed and Abbas2011, Reference Abed and Abbas2014).

Specifically, we were interested in their finding that schizophrenic patients responded differently in response to oxytocin (OT) towards in-group and out-group members, with patients showing no increased empathy in the painful out-group condition in contrast to controls where increased empathy in this condition was observed. This is consistent with the prediction of our ‘out-group intolerance hypothesis’ (OIH) where we suggested that schizophrenic patients would be less tolerant to out-group members than controls. Also, OT increased the level of empathy in healthy participants towards out-group members in the non-pain condition but had the opposite effect in the patient group. The administration of OT resulting in in-group bias in the patient group and out-group bias in the healthy controls is also supportive of our contention that the difficulty in schizophrenia patients may lie in their inability to re-designate out-group individuals as in-group members. In addition, the fact that in the healthy controls there was an increase in pain ratings in both the painful and non-painful stimuli in the OT condition with an increase in empathic response towards the out-group members similarly offers further support to the OIH.

In summary, the major finding of the study, namely that OT induced an empathic bias towards out-group members in healthy male controls but not in male schizophrenic patients, provides the first direct supportive evidence of the OIH.

Although OT failed to ‘normalize’ the response towards out-group individuals (especially the conflictual out-group) we have suggested that such a normalization may be feasible if patients were treated with OT at an early stage of their illness before the neuropathological changes have reached an advanced stage (Abed & Abbas, Reference Abed and Abbas2014). We hypothesized that treating the illness (with OT) at an early stage or treating ‘ultra-high-risk’ patients in the prodromal phase may offer a preventative strategy through ‘resetting the threshold’ for designating others within the social environment as in-group, thus rectifying what we consider to be the core psychopathological process that leads to the fully fledged syndrome of schizophrenia.

Declaration of Interest

None.

References

Abed, RT, Abbas, MJ (2011). A reformulation of the social brain theory for schizophrenia: the case for out-group intolerance. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 54, 132151.Google Scholar
Abed, RT, Abbas, MJ (2014). Can the new epidemiology of schizophrenia help elucidate its causation? Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 31, 15.Google Scholar
Abu-Akel, A, Fischer-Shofty, M, Levkovitz, Y, Decety, J, Shamay-Tsoory, S (2014). The role of oxytocin in empathy to the pain of conflictual out-group members among patients with schizophrenia. Psychological Medicine 44, 35233532.Google Scholar