Schizophrenia Flashcards
Schizophrenia
A severe mental illness where contact with reality and insight are impaired, an example of psychosis. The term comes from two Greek words: ‘schizo’, meaning ‘split’, and ‘phrena’ meaning ‘mind’. The ‘split’ in schizophrenia occurs between a person’s thought processes and reality.
Psychosis
Psychosis is a term used to describe a severe mental health problem where the individual loses contact with reality.
‘recovery’
Before the 1950s, many people with schizophrenia spent most of their lives in psychiatric hospitals. This is known as institutionalisation. New treatment methods have changed this. About 25% of sufferers will get better after only one episode of the illness; 50-65 % will improve, but continue to have bouts of the illness. The remainder will have persistent difficulties (Stirling and Hellewell, 1999).
Classification
There are a number of systems by which we can classify abnormal patterns of thinking, behaviour and emotion into mental disorders. These systems not only classify abnormality, but give guidance on how to diagnose them. The two most widely used systems of classification and diagnosis are ICD and DSM.
Disorganised/ Hebephrenic Schizophrenia
> disorganised speech, disorganised behaviour, flat or inappropriate affect and does not meet the criteria for Catatonic Type.
The person’s behaviour is generally disorganised and not goal-directed.
Symptoms include thought disturbances (including delusions and hallucinations), absence of expressed emotion, incoherent speech, large mood swings and a loss of interest in life – social withdrawal. It is usually diagnosed in adolescence/young adulthood.
Catatonic Schizophrenia
> Immobility or stupor excessive motor activity that is apparently purposeless, extreme negativity, strange voluntary movements as evidenced by posturing, stereotyped movements, prominent mannerisms or prominent grimacing.
This is diagnosed if the patient has severe motor abnormalities such as unusual gestures or use of body language. >Sometimes patients gesture repeatedly, using complex sequences of finger, hand and arm movements, which appear to have some meaning for them.
This type often involves doing opposite to what is being asked or repeating everything that is said.
The main feature is almost total immobility for hours at a time, with the patient simply staring blankly.
Paranoid schizophrenia
> Preoccupation with one or more delusions or frequent auditory hallucinations. No disorganised speech, disorganised or catatonic behaviour or flat or inappropriate affect.
This type involves delusions of various kinds (persecution and grandeur); however, the patient remains emotionally responsive. They are more alert than patients with other types of schizophrenia.
Paranoid schizophrenics tend to be argumentative. In some ways this is the least serious - but the most well-known. This often has a later onset than other types.
Undifferentiated schizophrenia
> Variation between symptoms not fitting into a particular type.
This is a broad, ‘catch-all’ category which includes patients who do not clearly belong within any other category. They show symptoms of schizophrenia but do not fit into the other types.
Residual schizophrenia
> Absence of prominent delusions, hallucinations, disorganised speech and grossly disorganised or catatonic behaviour. A presence of negative symptoms.
This is the category that describes people who, although they have had an episode of schizophrenia during the past 6 months and still exhibit some symptoms, these are not strong enough to merit putting them in the other categories.
This type consists of patients who are experiencing mild symptoms.
Symptoms
> Positive symptoms - Exeriences in addition to normal experiences. (Hallucinations and delusions)
Negative symptoms - Loss of normal experience or abilities. (Avolition and speech poverty)
Diagnosis
> In the DSM-5 system one of the so-called positive symptoms (delusions, hallucinations or speech disorganisation) must be present for diagnosis.
Under ICD, two or more positive symptoms must be present for a diagnosis to be made - only one symptom is needed if the delusions are bizarre, or if the hallucinations consist of a voice commenting on the individual’s behaviour.
The Prodromal Phase
The individual becomes withdrawn and lose interest in work, school and leisure activities.
The Active Phase
More obvious symptoms begin to occur: the duration of this phase can vary; for some people it will last a few months, whereas others remain in the active phase.
The Residual Phase
The obvious symptoms begin to subside, e.g. when treatment is given.
Onset of Schizophrenia
> Schizophrenia rarely starts before the age of 15, and although it affects men and women equally, there are differences in the age of onset.
Men usually notice the symptoms in their late teens. Women are affected later, in their twenties and thirties.
Mental Health Act and Schizophrenia
> Someone with schizophrenia may not realise they are ill and can refuse treatment when they need It.
As a result they can be admitted to hospital against their will and given treatment without their consent under the Mental health Act.
This should only happen if their health is at risk, if they are a danger to themselves, or if they may be a danger to others.
Evaluation - Reliability and Consistency of Diagnosis -
> An important measure of reliability is inter-rater reliability In relation to diagnosis, this means that different clinicians make identical, independent diagnosis of the same patient.
Cheniaux et al (2009)had two psychiatrists independently diagnose 100 patients using both DSM and ICD criteria. This poor reliability is a weakness of diagnosis of schizophrenia.
Evaluation - Reliability and Consistency of Diagnosis +
> Even if reliability of diagnosis based on classification systems is not perfect, they do provide practitioners with a common language, permitting communication of research ideas and findings, which may ultimately lead to a better understanding of the disorder and the development of better treatments.
Evidence does generally suggest that reliability of diagnoses has improved as classifications systems have been updated.
Evaluation - Validity and Accuracy of Diagnosis
> An important measure of validity is criterion validity: do different assessment systems arrive at the same diagnosis for the same patient?
Evidence from the Cheniaux et al (2009) study suggests that it is much more likely to be diagnosed using ICD rather than DSM
This suggests that schizophrenia is either over-diagnosed in ICD or under diagnosed in DSM >Either way, this is poor validity - a weakness of diagnosis of schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia case study 1
> DD, an economics graduate, frequently heard a voice (auditory hallucinations) she believed to be the devil. >The devil was using DD’s telepathic powers to control the Prime Minister, making him do things that would destroy the British economy (delusion of grandeur).
DD tried to resist the voice every time she heard it, by saying the opposite of what the voice commanded but would always eventually give in to the voice.
She monitored the economic news carefully, and always felt very guilty when the economy took a turn for the worse (Chadwick and Birchwood 1996).
Schizophrenia case study 2
A patient complained that communists were flying over his house in planes, shooting him with invisible rays (visual hallucinations) that caused abdominal churning, tension and heart palpitations (Turkington and Kingdon 1996).
Gender bias in diagnosis
> Underdiagnosis or women may be due to a gender bias with women’s issues not being taken seriously.
Cotton - Women may have better coping mechanisms and therefore not seek help
Cultural bias in diagnosis
> African Americans and English people of Afro-Caribbean origin are several times more likely than white people to be diagnosed with schizophrenia.
This suggests that the validity of the diagnosis is poor because either it is confounded by cultural beliefs and behaviours in patients, or by racist distrust of black patients on the part of mental health practitioners.
Co-morbidity
Often diagnosed with other disorders; depression 50%, drug abuse 47%, PTSD 29%, OCD 23% (Buckley 2009).
>Could lead to innacurate diagnosis of schizophrenia or as these diagnoses often occur together maybe they are not separate disorders
Symptom overlap
Bipolar disorder also has hallucinations and delusions as a positive symptom. If the two disorders are similar, they may not be different
Biological explanation: Genetics
> If schizophrenia is biological in nature then the more closely related two people are the more likely the other person is to have it.
Family studies: siblings more likely to both have it than cousins (shared environment)
Twin studies: MZ and DZ twins share environments so higher concordance rate is likely to be due to genetics
Twin Studies - Gottesman (1991)
Reviewed cases of schizophrenia and found a concordance rate of 48% for MZ twins and 17% for DZ twins. This compares to 1% general population rate. This suggests that the more genetically related two people are, the higher the rate of schizophrenia indicating a genetic link. Both siblings and DZ twins share 50% of DNA but siblings are significantly lower risk. Although, if it was entirely genetic it would be 100% for MZ twins.
Adoption Studies
These are studies of genetically related individuals who have been reared apart due to being adopted. Tienari (2000), found that of the 164 adoptees whose biological mothers had been diagnosed with schizophrenia , 6.7% also received a diagnosis of schizophrenia, compared to just 2% of the 197 control adoptees. Although only a small percentage, it still suggests that genes must play a role within schizophrenia. Tienari conducted his study within Finland, therefore we are not able to generalise this study to the rest of the world.
Dopamine Hypothesis
Symptoms of schizophrenia are associated with too much or an imbalance of the dopamine neurotransmitter in the brain. The theory originated from observations that dopamine-releasing drugs such as L-dopa can produce schizophrenia-like symptoms in healthy patients
Dopamine Hypothesis - Hyperdopaminergia
Hyperdopaminergia = Excessive levels of dopamine in the Subcortex and Broca’s Area