Schizophrenia Flashcards
DIAGNOSTIC GUIDELINES:
At least 1 very clear Sx. w duration >1 month. If <1 month=acute schizophrenia-like psychotic disorder.
a) thought echo,insertion/withdrawal, broadcasting.
b) delusions of control/influence/passivity clearly referred to body/limb movements or specific thoughts, actions or sensations; delusional perceptions.
c) auditory hallucinations giving running commentary/discussing patients among themselves/coming from some body part.
d) Bizzare delusions=persistent delusions/other kinds that are culturally inappropriate and completely impossible.
≥2 of:
e) other hallucinations when accompanied by fleeting/half-formed delusions wout clear affective content or by persistent over-valued ideas or when occuring every day for weeks/months.
f) Thought disorganization: loosening of associations/incoherence/irrelevant speech, or neologisms.
g) catatonic behaviour
h) negative Sx not attributed to depression/neuroleptic medication
i) significant and constant change in overall quality of some aspects of behaviour: aimlessness, social withdrawal, loss of interest
Dx cautions
X Dx in presence of extensive depressive/manic Sx unless schizophrenic Sx before affective disturbances.
X Dx in presence of overt brain disease/drug intoxication/withdrawal
Prodromal phase
Loss of interest, self-neglect, generalised anxiety and mild depression may preceed onset.
Schneider’s first-rank Sx. of schizophrenia
- Delusional perception
- Delusions of thought control: insertion, withdrawal, broadcasting
- Delusions of control: passivity experiences of affect, impulse, volition and somatic passivity
- Auditory hallucinations: audible thoughts/thought echo, voices discussing patient, running commentary.
SUBTYPES:
- Paranoid schizophrenia
- Disorganized/Hebephrenic Schizophrenia
- Catatonic schizophrenia
- Residual schizophrenia
- Dominated by positive Sx. ie delusions and hallucinations.
- Negative Sx., Catatonic Sx. and Thought disorganizations not prominent
- Better prognosis and later onset.
- need to exclude epilepsy and drug-induced psychoses
2.
- Thought disassociation, disturbed behaviour, inappropriate/flat affect
- Delusions/hallucinations not prominent/fleeting
- Earlier onset(15-25y)
- Poorer prognosis.
- premorbid personality usually shy and solitary.
- need to cont. observe for 2-3 months to reliably Dx.
- Rare
- Predominantly chronic negative Sx. persist for 1y after ≥1 psychotic episode
SCHIZOAFFECTIVE DISORDER
- within same episode of illness, presence of ≥1, preferably ≥2 typical Sx.(a-d) of schizophrenia and meet criteria for manic/depressive episode.
DELUSIONAL DISORDER
- Excludes typical schizophrenic delusions and hallucinations.
- Single set of delusions for ≥3 months.
- May have fleeting non-schizophrenic hallucinations,brief depressive Sx.
- otherwise affect, speech, behaviour, social skills preserved.
*Induced delusional disorder/folie a deux=Harley Quinn
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Lifetime risk 1%
- Prevalence 1%
- Male : Female 1.4:1
- Male 18-25y, Female 25-35y
- Increased incidence in urban and migrant populations.
AETIOLOGY
- Genetic
- genes involved in neurodevelopment and glutamate and dopamine metab.
- monozygotic twin concordance: 50%
- parent/sibling w schizophrenia: 10% risk - Developmental f.
- complications drg. pregnancy and birth. - Brain abn.
- Neurotransmitter abn.
- mainly dopamine; amfetamines, antiparkinsonian drugs
- serotonin and glutamate - Stressful life events
- Unsure if cause or result - Increased expressed emotion from those around
- over-involved/over-hostile
- increased risk of relapse
MANAGEMENT
- Tx. setting
- Pharmacological
- Physical Health
- Psychological Tx.
- Social Input
- a) Preferably home, admission if first episode, significant risk to others/self.
b) MHA detention w reduced insight and impaired judgement.
c) Long-term community Mx. ie CPN
d) Primary care if Sx. stable,well-controlled. - Long term Antipsychotics.
- 2nd gen usually first-line
- Clozapine best one but SE profile worrying. used in tx-resistant cases
- Tx. resistant when ≥2 drugs used sequentially for 6-8w with 1 drug being 2nd generation.
- benzodiazepine for aggression, agitation, insomnia
- antidepressant/lithium for affective Sx. - Increased risk of CV disease
- annual CV risk f. screen
- ECG prior to antipsychotics if in hospital or risk f. - a) Social support, education
b) CBT: offer to all pts. helps patients come to terms with illness, improves concordance.
c) Family psychological interv.
- reduces ‘expressed emotion’
- reduces relapse rates. - SANE, MIND; finance, occupation, activities, social supports and support for carers. Care programme approach
DRUG INFO
- 1st generation
- 2nd generation
- Common SE’s
- Drug-specific SE’s
- Chlorpromazine, Haloperidol, Flupentixol, Zuclopenthixol
- Olanzapine, Quetiapine, Risperidone, Aripiprazole, Clozapine
- Somnolence, Extra pyramidal SEs, Weight gain(except for aripiprazole)
- a) Chlorpromazine: Photosensitivity
b) Haloperidol: QT prolongation
c) Clozapine: Agranulocytosis(1%) needing regular blood monitoring,neutropenia(3%) hypersalivation, reduced seizure threshold, induce seizure in up to 3%
*Antipsychotics can cause acute dystonia which can be tx. w anticholinergics ie procyclidine
ACUTE BEHAVIOURAL DISTURBANCE
- Environmental intervention
- Behavioural intervention.
- talking calmly, distracting w questions about eating/sleeping etc - Rapid tranquilisation
a) Accepting oral meds
- Lorazepam 1-2 mg, 0.5 mg in elderly
- oral antipsychotic if psychotic
b) Risk to self/others
- IM lorazepam 1-2 mg, 0.5 mg in elderly
- olanzapine 10 mg 1h after IM lorazepam; haloperidol 5 mg if psychotic
* repeat tranquilisations as req. every 45-60 mins - If parenteral tranquilisation, monitor BP, TPR regularly
PROGNOSIS
- average life span shortened by 15y
- Cause of death usually suicide, increased smoking, socioeconomic deprivation, CV, resp, accidents.
- Risk f for suicide: male of higher education, some insight into illness.
- Better prognosis in low-income countries
- likely due to better extended family social support. - Good prognosis f: female, married, older age of onset, abrupt onset, precipitated by life stress, earlier tx initiation, paranoid subtype, absence of negative Sx., illness characterized by prominent mood Sx., good premorbid fn.
EPIDEMIOLOGY:
- Onset typically after puberty.
- Incidence highest in males 15-25y; in females 20-30y
- Prevalence equal in both