Chapter 13 – Schizophrenia And Other Psychotic Disorders Flashcards
Severe impairment in the ability to tell what is real and what is not real
Psychosis
Describe the origins of schizophrenia’s construct
The first detailed description was offered in 1810 by John Haslam. Other early accounts pointed to brain degeneration of hereditary origin.
The German psychiatrist Emil Kraeplin is best known for his careful description of what we now call schizophrenia. Used the term dementia praecox to refer her to a group of conditions that all seems to feature mental deterioration beginning early in life. Describe the patient as someone who become suspicious of those around him, sees poison in his food, is pursued by the police, feels his body is being influenced, or think that he’s going to be shot or that the neighbours are jeering at him. The disorder was characterized by hallucinations, apathy and indifference, withdrawn behavior, and an incapacity for regular work.
A Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler gave us the diagnostic term we still used today. Schizophrenia is from the Greek roots of sxizo meaning to split or crack, and phren meeting mind, because he believed that the condition was characterized primarily by disorganization of thought processes, a lack of coherence between thought and emotion, and an inward orientation away or split off from reality.
This does not reflect a split personality, instead there is a split within the intellect, between intellect and emotion, and between the intellect and external reality.
Explain epidemiology of schizophrenia
The lifetime risk of developing it is a little under 1%. Those who have a parent with schizophrenia have a statistically higher risk of developing the disorder. Other groups of people who are at high risk are people whose fathers were older, having a parent who works as a drycleaner, people of Afro-Caribbean origin living in United Kingdom.
Most cases begin in late adolescence and early childhood, with 18 to 30 years of age being the peak time. Although sometimes found in children, such cases are rare. Also rare is those beginning in middle age or later.
Tends to begin earlier in men then in women. In men, there is a peek in new cases between ages 20 and 24 and in women peak during the same age., But the peak is less marked then it is for men. After age 35, the number of men developing it falls markedly, where is the number of women does not. Instead there is a second rising new cases that begins around age 40.
Males also tend to have a more severe form of schizophrenia. The male to female sex ratio is 1.4:1. Women have a less severe form, but also have more symptoms of depression, and me either not be diagnosed at all or else be diagnosed with other disorders. One other possibility is that female sex hormones play some protective role, and then when oestrogen levels are low or are falling, psychotic symptoms in women often get worse. Declining levels of oestrogen around menopause might also explain the late onset schizophrenia in women
False belief about reality maintained in spite of strong evidence to the contrary
Delusion
False perceptions such as things seen or heard that are not real or present
Hallucinations
The external manifestation of a disorder in thought form. The affected person fails to make sense, despite seeming to conform to the semantic and syntactic rules governing verbal communication.
Disorganized speech and behaviour
Symptoms such as bizarre behaviour or incomprehensible speech in schizophrenia
Disorganized symptoms
Symptoms in schizophrenia that are characterized by something being added to normal behaviour or experience. Includes delusions, hallucinations, motor agitation, and marked emotional turmoil
Positive symptoms
Symptoms in schizophrenia that reflect an absence or deficit in normal functions. For example, blunted affect, social withdrawal, very little speech, the inability to initiate or persist in goal directed activities
Negative symptoms
The lack of emotional expression
Flat affect
A term referring to poverty of speech a symptom that often occurs in schizophrenia.
Alogia
Refers to a psychological state that is characterized by a general lack of drive or motivation to pursue meaningful goals
Avolition
Describe the clinical picture of schizophrenia including the diagnostic signs of both positive and negative symptoms
Delusions: an erroneous belief that is fixed and firmly held despite clear contradictory evidence. These people believe things that others who share their social, religious, and cultural backgrounds do not believe, and therefore, involves a disturbance in the content of thought.
Common in schizophrenia, occurring in more than 90% of patients at sometime.
Prominent are beliefs that one’s thoughts, feelings, or actions are being controlled by external agents (made feelings or impulses), that one’s private thoughts are being broadcast indiscriminately to others (thought broadcasting), that thoughts are being inserted into one’s brain by some external agency (thought insertion), or that some external agency has robbed one of one’s thoughts (thought withdrawal).
Other common delusions are delusions of reference, where some neutral environmental event such as a television program or a song on the radio, is believed to have special and personal meeting intended only for the person. Other strange propositions, including delusions of bodily changes or removal of organs are also common.
Hallucinations: a sensory experience that seems real to the person having it, but ochres in the absence of any external perceptual stimulus.
Can occur in any sensory modalities such as auditory, visual, olfactory, tactile, or gustatory, however, auditory hallucinations such as hearing voices are by far the most common.
Often have relevance for the patient at some effective, conceptual, or behaviour level and often incorporate them into their delusions. May even act on their hallucinations and do what the voices tell them to do.
Studies have shown that hallucinating patients show increased activity in Broca’s area – an area of the temporal lobe that is involved in speech production. This suggests that auditory hallucinations ochre when patients miss interpret their own self generated and verbally mediated thoughts as coming from another source.
Disorganized speech and behavior: the external manifestation of a disorder in thought form. The affected person fails to make sense, despite seeming to conform to the semantic and syntactic rules governing verbal communication. The failure is not attributable to low intelligence, poor education, or cultural deprivation.
The words and word combinations sound communicative, but the Lissner is left with little or no understanding of the point the speaker is trying to make. In some cases, completely new, made up words known as neologisms, appear in the patients speech.
Disorganized behaviour shows itself in a variety of ways such as the disruption of goal-directed activity. The impairment occurs in areas of routine daily functioning, such as work, social relations, and self-care to the extent that observers know that the person is not himself or herself anymore. May no longer maintain minimal standards of personal hygiene or me exhibit a profound disregard of personal safety and health. Sometimes appears as silliness or unusual dress.
Catatonia – patient may show a virtual absence of all movement and speech and be in what is called a catatonic stupor. May hold and an usual posture for an extended period of time without any seeming discomfort.
Positive and negative symptoms:
Positive symptoms are those that reflect and exes or distortion in a normal repertoire of behaviour and experience, such as delusions and hallucinations.
Negative symptoms reflect an absence or deficit of behaviours that are normally present. May include flat affect, alogia, avolition.
Although most patients exhibit both positive and negative symptoms during the course of their disorders, a preponderance of negative symptoms in the clinical picture is not a good sign for the patients future outcome. And although sometimes may not look very emotionally expressive, they are nonetheless experiencing plenty of emotion.
When a patient shows a virtual absence of all movement and speech.
Catatonia
May also be called a catatonic stupor. At other times the patient may hold an unusual posture for an extended period of time without any seeming discomfort.
Form of psychotic disorder in which the symptoms of schizophrenia co-occur with symptoms of a mood disorder.
The person has psychotic symptoms that meets criteria for schizophrenia but also has marked changes in mood for a substantial amount of time.
Schizoaffective disorder
Reliability is quite poor, and clinicians often do not agree.
Prognosis is somewhere between that of patients with schizophrenia and that of patients with mood disorders.