Schizophrenia Flashcards

1
Q

What is the two factor model of schizophrenia?

A

Factor 1:
- confabulations and delusions

Factor 2:
- failure in a common set of evaluation and monitoring processes, which allow these thoughts to be accepted and maintained rather than being rejected (no “tag” by unconscious system)

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2
Q

What are the 3 main symptoms of schizophrenia + definitions?

A

1) positive symptoms = excesses of thoughts, emotions, or behaviors
2) negative symptoms = deficits of thought, emotion and behavior
3) disorganized symptoms = disturbance in the production and organization of thoughts

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3
Q

What is the prevalence and age of appearance of schizophrenia?

A

lifetime prevalence = 1%

appearance in late adolescence or early adulthood

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4
Q

What is the 2 phases which occur in the course of schizophrenia?

A

1) prodromal phase = period of significant symptoms are apparent
2) active phase = symptoms are most pronounced
3) residual phase = primary symptoms have subsided, but other symptoms may still be present

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5
Q

What are the outcomes for patients with schizophrenia 10 years after initial diagnosis?

A
25% completely recoverd
25% improved, relatively independent
25% improved, but extensive support required
15% hospitalized, unimproved
10% deceased (mostly suicide)
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6
Q

What are the most common comorbid disorders with schizophrenia?

A

50% substance abuse

up to 15% commit suicide

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7
Q

What is the etiology of schizophrenia?

A
  • genetics
  • neurotransmitters (abnormalities in DA, also serotonin, GABA, glutamate and others)
  • brain imaging: enlarged ventricles
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8
Q

What are the 2 forms of pharmacological treatment of schizophrenia + their mechanisms?

A

1) traditional antipsychotic drugs
- primarily blocking D2 receptors
- reduction of positive and disorganized symptoms
- little or no effect on negative symptoms

2) atypical antipsychotic drugs
- not primarily blocking D2 receptors
- broader spectrum of receptor activity with higher affinities to other receptors (e.g. serotonin, GABA)
- reduction of positive and disorganized symptoms
- mabe better in reducing negative symptoms

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9
Q

Name the psychological treatments of schizophrenia (4)

A
  • psychoanalytic therapies
  • family therapy and reducing expressed emotion
  • social-skills training
  • CBT
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10
Q

What are the strongest neuropsychological predictors of clinical outcome in schizophrenia? (5)

A
  • working memory
  • executive functioning
  • verbal learning
  • memory
  • processing speed
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11
Q

Do cognitive impairments precede schizophrenia?

A

Yes: cognitive deficits are markers of schizophrenia vulnerability

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12
Q

Describe the ethical dilemma of using animal models of schizophrenia

A

One the one hand: animal rights
On the other:
- experiments can be performed that cannot be performed in humans
- these experiments may be crucial for the development of new treatment approaches

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13
Q

How are the positive, negative and cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia measured in animal models?

A
  • positive: hyperactivity, hyperlocomotion and stereotypic behavior
  • negative: social withdrawal
  • cognitive: tested by maze tasks
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14
Q

What are delusions?

A

Beliefs:

  • that are not objectively true
  • that would not be accepted as true within the persone’s culture
  • that the person holds firmly in spite of contradictory evidence
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15
Q

What are the most common delusions?`

A

60-70%: delusions of reference or persecution

+/- 30%: religious or grandiosity delusions

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16
Q

What is theory of mind?

A

The ability to infer the mental states (beliefs, thoughts, and intensions) of others in order to predict their behavior

17
Q

What did Firth (1992) hypothesize regarding ToM in schizophrenia?

A

Firth proposed that ToM deficits underpin the origin of delusions. He hypothesized that ToM skills in people with delusions develop normally but are “lost” during an acute psychotic episode