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Schizophrenia. Chapter 12. Schizophrenia . Broad spectrum of cognitive and emotional dysfunctions that include Hallucinations Delusions Disorganized speech and behavior Inappropriate emotions. Affects about 1 in 100 Complete recovery is rare Costs in 1991 estimated at $65 billion.
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Schizophrenia Chapter 12
Schizophrenia • Broad spectrum of cognitive and emotional dysfunctions that include • Hallucinations • Delusions • Disorganized speech and behavior • Inappropriate emotions
Affects about 1 in 100 • Complete recovery is rare • Costs in 1991 estimated at $65 billion
Early figures • Emil Kraepelin • Dementia praecox • Distinguished this from manic-depressive illness by emphasizing onset and outcome • Eugen Bleuler • Schizophrenia. “split mind” • “Breaking of associative threads” • Recognized inability to keep constant stream of thought
Symptoms of heterogeneous: not all people with schizophrenia share the same symptoms • Psychotic: delusions or hallucinations • Person can display psychosis without having schizophrenia
Positive symptoms • Active manifestations of abnormal behavior or an excess or distortion of normal behavior • Delusions • Delusions of grandeur • Delusions of persecution
Positive symptoms… • Hallucinations • The experience of sensory events without input from the environment • Auditory hallucinations are the most common • Broca’s area (speech) active not Wernicke’s area (language comprehension)
Negative symptoms • Absence or insufficiency of normal behavior • Social withdrawal • Apathy • Impoverished speech or thought • Avoliton: apathy • Alogia: poverty of speech
Negative symptoms • Anhedonia: lack of pleasure • Flat affect: lack of emotional expression
Disorganized symptoms • Rambling speech, erratic behavior, inappropriate affect • Disorganized speech • Cognitive slippage • Tangentiality • Loose associations
Disorganized symptoms…. • Inappropriate affect • Laughing or crying at inappropriate times • Disorganized behavior • Catatonia
Subtypes of Schizophrenia • Paranoid • Disorganized • Catatonic • Undifferentiated • residual
Paranoid Schizophrenia • Hallucinations and delusions • Relatively intact cognitive skills and affect • Generally do not have disorganized speech • Best prognosis • Delusions of grandeur and persecution
Disorganized type (hebephrenia) • Marked disruptions in speech and behavior • Flat or inappropriate affect • Delusions tend to be fragmented • Shows up early and tends to be chronic
Catatonic type • Unusual motor responses and odd mannerism • Echolalia • Echopraxia: relatively rare
Undifferentiated type • “catch all” category • Some symptoms but do not meet full criteria for paranoid, disorganized or catatonic types
Residual type • At least one episode but no longer displaying major symptoms. • Often have residual symptoms • Negative beliefs • Unusual or bizarre ideas • Social withdrawal • Flat affect
Other psychotic disorders • Schizophreniformn disorder • Schizoaffective disorder • Delusional disorder • Brief psychotic disorder • Shared psychotic disorder • Schizotypal personality disorder
Developmental research • Early brain damage? • Brain plasticity • Compensation in early life more difficult as person gets older
Genetic influence • More severe the parent’s schizophrenia greater likelihood child will develop schizophrenia • Genetic relatedness increases chances • Monozygotic twins: 48% • Fraternal: 17% • Genes predispose person to schizophrenia • Smooth movement eye tracking: genetic marker?
Neurological considerations • Dopamine • Excess can cause psychotic symptoms • Antipsychotic drugs block dopamine receptors • Negative effects of drugs similar to Parkinson's disease
Neurological considerations..dopamine • BUT • Many with schizophrenia not helped by dopamine antagonists • Dopamine blocked quickly, but symptoms remit long after • More likely a dopamine/serotonin interaction • Virus?
Neurological damage….. • Positive symptoms: dopamine? • Negative symptoms: enlarged ventricles? • Can have these abnormalities w/o schizophrenia • Less activity in frontal lobes, particularly dopamine pathway • Finger tip ridge count: in 1/3 of of discordant twins
Psychological and social influences • Extreme stress can produce psychotic symptoms • May activate predisposition • Family interactions: • Schizophrenogenic mother and double bind largely discounted • Expressed emotion related to relapse • Criticism, hostility and emotional over-involvement
Treatment • Institutionalization • Prefrontal lobotomy • ECT • Insulin therapy • Neuroleptic drugs • Conventional drugs : unpleasant side effects • Atypical antipsychotics
New treatment? • Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Psychosocial interventions • Behavioral approaches • Socialization • Self-care • Appropriate emotional responses • Token economies • Independent living skills • Behavioral family therapy • Vocational rehabilitation
Cultural factors • Differences in family support (Hispanics) • China: meds and hospitalization • Africa: prisons
prevention • Genetic markers • Early intervention