Chapter 13 Flashcards
1
Q
What is psychosis
A
- Psychosis
o Hallucinations and delusions experienced in several disorders - How is psychosis related to schizophrenia spectrum disorders
o Some degree of psychosis is typically the defining feature of schizophrenia spectrum disorders
o Compared to the other spectrum disorders, psychosis is much more severe in schizophrenia
2
Q
Schizophrenia
A
- Severe disorder characterized by a broad spectrum of cognitive and emotional dysfunctions
o Includes severe disturbances in thought, language, emotion, behavior
o Positive symptoms: exaggerated or excess of behavior
o Negative symptoms: absence or insufficiency of normal behavior
o Disorganized symptoms: erratic behaviors; affect speech, motor behavior, emotional reactions
o Typically includes psychosis
o Functioning: markedly below previously achieved level
3
Q
Schizophrenia: “positive” symptoms
A
- Delusions o Characterized by gross misrepresentations of reality o Types of delusions: • Delusions of grandeur • Delusions of persecution • Capgras syndrome • Cotard’s syndrome o Etiological views of delusion s • Motivation • Deficit - Hallucinations o Sensory experience in absence of environmental stimuli or input o Can involve all senses o Most common: • Metacognition • Own vs. other voice • Broca’s area
4
Q
Schizophrenia “negative”symptoms
A
- Abolition (or apathy)
o Inability to initiate and persist in activities - Alogia
o Relative absence of speech - Anhedonia
o Lack of pleasure, or indifference - Affective flattening
o Absence of normally expected emotional responses - Asociality
o Severe deficits in social functioning; social impairment
5
Q
Schizophrenia: “disorganized” symptom cluster
A
- Disorganized speech
o Cognitive slippage: illogical and incoherent speech
o Tagentiality: “going off on a tangent” from the topic, but logically related
o Loose associations or derailment: taking conversation in unrelated directions, frequent unrelated topic changes - Disorganized affect
o Inappropriate emotional behavior - Disorganized behavior
o Includes a variety of unusual behaviors including catatonia
6
Q
Prevalence and course of schizophrenia
A
- Prevalence o Affects ~1 out of 100 persons (0.3-1.5%) - Course = chronic o Complete recovery is rare • Moderate to severe lifetime impairment o Life expectancy = less than average • Suicide is common - Onset = late teens to mid 30s - Female : male = ~1:1 - Female o Later age of onset o Better outcomes - Males o Higher incidence of negative symptoms o Longer duration