Schizophrenia Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four first rank symptoms of schizophrenia?

A
  1. Auditory hallucinations (2nd/3rd person, thought echo)
  2. Thought disorder (insertion, withdrawal, broadcasting)
  3. Passivity phenomena (somatic passivity, made act/feeling/drive)
  4. Delusional perceptions
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2
Q

What are the other features of schizophrenia that aren’t first rank?

A
  1. persistent hallucinations in any modality
  2. neologisms, breaks in train of thought, incoherent/irrelevant speech
  3. Catatonia
  4. Negative sx
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3
Q

What are -ve sx?

A

incongruity/blunting of effect
anhedonia
alogia - poverty of speech
avolition - poor motivation

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4
Q

What is the diagnostic criteria of schizophrenia? How long is the time frame?

A

1 or more of the first rank sx for 1 month or more
OR
Any 2 of the other symptoms
decrease in function!

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5
Q

What are the four different causes of psychosis? give examples

A
  1. Affective disorders (schizophrenia, depression, bipolar)
  2. Transient psychosis (drugs/alcohol)
  3. Med conditions (dementia, delirium, tumour)
  4. Schizophrenia like non-affective disorders (brief psychotic disorder, delusional disorder, schizophreniform disorder)
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6
Q

what are the four subtypes of schizophrenia?

A
  1. Paranoid - mainly hallucinations +/- delusions
  2. Hebephrenic - fluctuating affect prominent w fleeting fragmented delusions and hallucinations
  3. Catatonic - stupor, posturing, waxy flexibility, negativism
  4. Simple and residual - mainly negative sx
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7
Q

What are prodromal sx to schizophrenia? how early do they precede the first episodes of psychosis?

A
Decline in functioning:
transient/attenuated psychotic sx
odd thoughts beliefs etc
conc. problems
altered affect (immediate emotional responses)
social withdrawal 
reduced interest in activities
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8
Q

Give an MRI sign in schizophrenics and 2 social factors linked to causing it.

A

Small amygydalas, frontal lobes temporal lobes. Social: Brought up in a city, being a migrant

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9
Q

What is the main aetiological theory behind schizophrenia?

A

Unusual neurodevelopment via genetics/insult to brain in development.

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10
Q

What are the two strands of management?

A

Antipsychotics and psychosocial interventions

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11
Q

Describe three schizophrenia-like disorders.

A

Schizoaffective disorder: mania/depression with schizophrenia at the same time at the same intensity.
Schizotypal disorder: Personality disorder (see later).
Schizophreniform disorder: Failure to meet threshold for schizophrenia (usually due to time) but some symptoms and a decrease in function.

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12
Q

What psychological therapy has strong evidence? Give 2 other non-pharmacological methods.

A

CBT for psychosis. Also: family therapy, social support (!)(money, job house)

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13
Q

Give 5 Ix to monitor in antipsychotic use.

A

Glucose, lipids, prolactin, LFT, U+E, ECG, BP, weight

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14
Q

Which drug is first line?

A

Any antipsychotic. All have efficacy but different side effects. Normally antipsychotics begin working on psychosis in a couple of weeks

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15
Q

Define treatment resistant schizophrenia. What is used to treat it?

A

if 2 sets of 6 week trials of antipsychotics failed (incl. 1 non-clozapine SGA)
USE CLOZAPINE

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16
Q

What if there is a failure to respond to this?

A

Can combine. Can use lamotrigine to augment. ECT can be used.

17
Q

When should antipsychotics be stopped?

A

A guide is 3 years, before this 80% relapse. But there is no completely safe time.

18
Q

Give the treatment for: acute dystonia, akathisia, and tardive dyskinesia.

A

Dystonia: IM/PO procyclidine. Akathisia: Lower dose or change or stop medicine. Propranolol can be tried. Tardive dyskinesia: May be irreversible, tetrabenzine can be used.

19
Q

What is the prognosis like for schizophrenia?

A

Generally not great. 10% have one episode, 40% are better in 15 years. On average, schizophrenics die 25 years earlier than a normal person

20
Q

The cause of psychosis can be tricky to find. With auditory hallucinations what is it likely to be? What about non-auditory? When should a CT be done?

A

Auditory: likely to be a mental disorder – schizophrenia/depression etc. Non-auditory: 90% have substance abuse/withdrawal/physical illness. CT head needed in any olfactory, tactile, or gustatory hallucinations, or any suspicion of neurological disease