Psych - Schizophrenia Flashcards
What is psychosis?
- Definition: misperception of through and perceptions that arise from the patient’s own mind/imagination as reality and includes delusions and hallucinations
- Approx 3% of general population has clinically significant psychosis
- Symptom, not a diagnosis
Name some psychotic disorders
- Schizophrenia
- Schizoaffective disorder
- Delusional disorder
- Brief psychotic episodes
- Psychotic depression
- Bipolar affective disorder
- Drug induced psychoses
What are risk factors for schizophrenia/developing psychotic disorders?
- Relative with schizophrenia
- Black Caribbean ethnicity
- Migration
- Urban environment
- Cannabis use
Name other features of schizophrenia
- Impaired insight
- Incongruity/blunting of affect (inappropriate emotion for circumstances)
- Decreased speech
- Neologism
- Catatonia
- Negative sx: anhedonia, alogia (paucity of speech), avolition (poor motivation)
What is Schizophrenia? What are the 1st rank symptoms?
-Mental illness characterised by episodes of psychosis
1st rank sx:
- Delusions: persecutory (someone is out to get me) or of reference (patient is mentioned on TV/knows people are talking about them)
- In mood disorders the delusions will be in keeping with the mood (ie grandiose if high or nihilistic/depressive if low)
- Formal thought disorder: loosening of association, neologism, concrete thinking (cannot deal with abstract)
- 2nd person auditory hallucination, usually talking in the 3rd person about patient
- Passivity: actions, feelings or impulses interfered with and/or somatic passivity (body controlled by others).
- Presence of 1st rank sx is highly suggestive of schizophrenia but these can also occur in 8% of pts with bipolar and approx 20% of patients with chronic schizophrenia may never exhibit them
Name the subtypes of schizophrenia
- Paranoid: most common - delusions and auditory hallucinations will be of paranoid nature
- Catatonic: uncommon - psychomotor disturbances (immobility or excessive activity), rigidity, posturing, echolalia (copying speech), echopraxia (copying behaviours)
- Hebephrenic: disorganised - early onset and with poor prognosis, patients have irresponsible and unpredictable behaviour with inappropriate and incongruous affect
- Residual (chronic): there is a history of the types above - negative and cognitive sx dominate current illness
- Undifferentiated: uncommon - negative sx without preceding over psychotic sx
What is schizoaffective disorder?
-Affective and schizophrenic sx occur together and with equal prominence
What is delusional disorder?
-Fixed delusion or delusional system (associated delusions) with other areas of thinking and functioning well preserved
What are the treatment principles for schizophrenia?
- Offer early intervention in community
- Oral atypical antipsychotics are 1st line (avoid 2 concurrent antipsychotics) - start with lowest positive dose. Try at least 2 antipsychotics before considering Clozapine
- Monitor weight, ECG, FBC, lipids, HBA1c profiles, prolactin levels
- Offer CBT to all patients
- Monitoring of CVS risk factor modification due to high rates of CVS in these patients (linked to antipsychotic medication and high smoking rates)
- Provide social support to increased engagement, hope and reduce stigma
- Support with substance misuse if any
What is defined as a brief psychotic episode?
-Psychotic episode lasting less than the time required to make a schizophrenia diagnosis (1/12 for ICD-10 or 6/12 for DSM)