Schizophrenia: diagnosis Flashcards

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1
Q

what is a psychosis?

A
  • a severe mental health problem where individual loses contact with reality -> unlike neurosis where individual is aware of the problem.
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2
Q

What are the types of schizophrenia?

A
  • Disorganised schizophrenia
  • catatonic schizophrenia
  • paranoid schizophrenia
  • undifferentiated schizophrenia
  • residual schizophrenia
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3
Q

what is disorganised schizophrenia?

A
  • behaviour is disorganised and not goal directed.
  • symptoms: thought disturbances (delusions, hallucinations), absence of expressed emotion, incoherent speech, social withdrawal.
  • usually diagnosed in adolescence.
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4
Q

what are the 2 subtypes of catatonic schizophrenia?

A
  • echolalia
  • echopraxia
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5
Q

what is echolalia (catatonic)

A
  • involuntary parrot-like repetition of a word or phrase spoken by another person.
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6
Q

what is echopraxia (catatonic)

A
  • involuntary imitation of body movements of another person, sometimes produced by catatonic patients.
    -> severe unusual gestures or use of body language.
    -> complex sequence of finger, hand and arm movements.
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7
Q

what is another symptom of catatonic schizophrenia

A
  • total immobility for hours at a time, patient simply stares blankly into space.
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8
Q

what is paranoid schizophrenia

A
  • delusions of various kinds (persecution, grandeur etc) -> remains emotionally responsive.
  • more alert than patients with other schizophrenia types.
  • argumentative.
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9
Q

what is undifferentiated schizophrenia?

A
  • broad ‘catch-all’ category -> patients who do not clearly belong within any other category.
    -> shows symptoms but does not clearly fit in any specific category.
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10
Q

what is residual schizophrenia?

A
  • although had episode of schizophrenia during past 6 months and exhibit some symptoms -> not strong enough to merit putting them in other categories.
    -> consists of patients experiencing mild symptoms.
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11
Q

what are the positive symptoms of schizophrenia?

A
  • hallucinations
  • delusions
  • disorganised speech
  • grossly disorganised or catatonic behaviour
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12
Q

what are the negative symptoms of schizophrenia?

A
  • speech poverty
  • lack of emotion
  • avolition (becoming disinterested)
  • lack of ability to function normally
  • negative symptoms are less dramatic but last longer than positive symptoms.
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13
Q

what are the secondary symptoms of schizophrenia?

A
  • depression
  • loss of employment
  • breakdown of relationships
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14
Q

when are men and women usually diagnosed with schizophrenia

A
  • men: 15-25 years old
  • women: 30+ years old
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15
Q

what are the evaluations for diagnoses of schizophrenia

A

positive:
- reliability -> consistency of diagnoses

negative:
- lack of reliability
- co-morbidity
- cultural bias

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16
Q

(+) Explain how diagnoses is consistent

A
  • practitioners are provided with a common language, permitting communication of research ideas and findings -> may ultimately lead to development of better treatments.
  • evidence suggests reliability has improved as a classifications systems have been updated.
17
Q

(-) explain how diagnosis lacks reliability (Cheniaux)

A

Cheniaux et al study:
- inter-rater reliability (diagnoses must be 80% consistent amongst clinicians for the same patient).
- had 2 psychiatrists independently diagnose 100 patients using both DSM + ICD criteria -> had very inconsistent diagnoses.
- poor reliability.

18
Q

(-) Explain how co-morbidity can negatively affect accuracy/reliability of diagnoses.

A
  • co-morbidity: occurrence of 2 illnesses or conditions occurring simultaneously.
    -> confusion of which disorder is being diagnosed, e.g. schizophrenia or depression.
  • patients have also been found to have a diagnosis of depression (50%) or substance abuse (47%) etc.
  • can raise issues of descriptive validity, having simultaneous disorders suggests schizophrenia may not actually be a separate disorder.
19
Q

(-) explain how diagnosis suffers from cultural bias (Whaley) (Copeland)

A
  • those of African/afro-carribean descent are more likely than whites to be diagnosed.
  • Whaley: reason blacks are diagnosed more (2.1% > 1.4%) is cultural bias -> ethnic differences in symptom expression are overstated or misinterpreted.
  • Copeland: 69% American psychiatrists diagnosed a patient as having schizophrenia compared with 2% of British psychiatrists.