Schizophrenia and psychotic disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of psychosis

A
  • Severe form of mental illness
  • Lack of insight into illness
  • Difficulty distinguishing between symptoms of delusion, hallucination and disordered thinking from reality
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2
Q

Presentation of psychosis

A
  • Hallucination
    • All aspects of true perception: clarity
    • Externallyl located
    • No external stimulus
    • Not willed or controlled
    • 5 special senses → auditory, visual, olfactory, gustatory, tactile
  • Delusional beliefs
    • Unshakeable idea or belief outwit personal social and cultural background
    • Grandiose, paranoid, hypochondriacal, self-referential
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3
Q

How is psychosis classified

A
  • Rarely a disorder on its own, most commonly classified by diseases accompanied by psychotic features
    • Schizophrenia
    • Delirium
    • Severe affective disorder (depression with psychosis, mania with psychosis)
      *
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4
Q

Definition of schizophrenia

A
  • Severe mental illness affecting, thoughts, behaviours and emotions
  • Most common cause of psychosis → 1/100 population
  • F=M
  • Onset 15-35 years, earlier in men
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5
Q

Presentation of schizophrenia

A
  • Positive symptoms
    • Hallucinations
    • Delusions
    • Disordered thinking
  • Negative symptoms
    • Apathy
    • Lack of interest
    • Lack of emotions
  • Positive symptoms are sign of acute illness whereas negative symptoms are a sign of poorer prognosis
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6
Q

Diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia diagnosis (ICD 10)

A
  • Occurring for more than a month and in absence of organic or affective disorder
  • One or more of:
    • Alienation of thought → thought echo, thought insertion/ withdrawal/ broadcasting
    • Delusions of control → influence or passivity in reference to body, limb movements, sensations or delusional perceptions
    • Hallucinatory voices → third party, running commentary of patients behaviours, discussing amongst themselves, voices coming from specific parts of body
    • Persistent delusion → inappropriate to patient and completely impossible (ie. ability to control weather)
  • Or two of:
    • Persistence hallucinations → any modality
    • Neologisms → break or interpolation of train of thought (causes gibberish)
    • Catatonic behaviours → eccentricity, posturing, flexibility, negativism, mutism, stupor
    • Negative symptoms → apathy, poverty of speech, blunting/ incongruity of emotions
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7
Q

Aetiology of schizophrenia

A
  • Biological
  • Psychological
  • Social
  • Evolutionary theory
  • Above can be classified into possible predisposing, precipitating or perpetuating factors
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8
Q

Biological factors of schizophrenia

A
  • Genetics
    • Monozygotic twins → 50%
    • One parent → 10%
    • Dizygotic twins → 10%
    • Specific genes → neuregulin, dysbindin, Di George syndrome
  • Neurochemistry
    • ‘Dopamine hypothesis’ → increases levels of dopamine in key dopaminergic pathways
    • Glutamate
    • GABA
    • Noradrenaline
    • Serotonin
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9
Q

Neurological abnormalities in schizophrenia

A
  • Reduced brain volume → 3%
  • Ventricular enlargement → 25%
  • Cytoarchitectural abnormalities
  • Reduce frontal lobe functioning
  • Eye tracking disorder → saccadic
  • Soft neurological signs
  • EEC abnormalities
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10
Q

Other etiological factors of schizophrenia

A
  • Migrant population → caused by social isolation from individuals identity, culture and morals
  • Drift hypothesis → occupation and social class changes
  • Social isolation
  • Major life events → precipitant
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11
Q

Differentials fo psychotic disorder

A
  • Delirium or acute organic brain syndrome
    • Brain or systemic disease
    • Particular visual experience, hallucination, illusion
    • Delusions of persecutory and transient
    • Fluctuates but worst at night
  • Depressive episode with psychotic symptoms
    • Delusions of guilt, worthlessness, persecution
    • Derogatory auditory hallucination
    • Inherently severe depression
  • Manic episode with psychotic symptoms
    • Delusions of grandeur → special powers, god-complex
    • Gross overactivity → irritability, behavioural abnormalities, manic excitement
    • Inherently severe mania
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12
Q

Schizoaffective disorder

A
  • Mix of affective and schizophrenic features
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13
Q

Management of schizophrenia ?

A
  • Provision of information → education of patient and career
  • Access and engagement of care → involves treatment of comorbid conditions (substance-misuse)
  • Early intervention services
    • Family-based interventions
    • Psychological interventions
    • Educational intervention
    • Access to antipsychotic medication
      *
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14
Q

Prognosis and recovery of schizophrenia

A
  • Aim is to live a meaningful and functional life with the absence of symptoms
  • 80% recover after first psychotic episode
  • 50% have moderate recovery
  • Small group with chronic condition and little recovery
  • Early intervention → effective treatment and better outlook
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15
Q

Good prognostic factors

A
  • Absence of family history
  • Good premorbid function → stable personality, stable relationships
  • Clear cause of precipitation
  • Acute onset
  • Presence of mood disturbances
  • Prompt and effective treatment
  • Maintenance of initiative and motivation
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16
Q

Poor prognostic factors

A
  • Slow, insidious onset
  • More predominant negative symptoms (apathy, lack of interest and emotion)
  • Began in childhood
17
Q

Complications of schizophrenia

A
  • 1.6 timers higher mortality
  • Shorter life expectancy
  • Linked to CVS, respiratory and cancer causing diseases
  • 9 times higher suicide risk
  • Risk of violent death
  • Risk of substance misuse disorder
18
Q

Key points

A
  • Critical to understand concepts of delusion and hallucination
  • Psychosis present in schizophrenia, affective disorder and delirium