XII - Schizophrenia Flashcards

1
Q

Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders

A
  • Schizophrenia
  • Other Psychotic Disorders
  • Schizotypal Personality Disorder

Note that Schizotypal Disorder is also in Personality Disorders - only disorder that is in two categories

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2
Q

Hallmark of schizophrenia

A

Psychosis - a significant loss of contact with reality. Symptoms - delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, disorganized and catatonic behavior

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3
Q

Etymology - “Split Mind”

A

Does not refer to multiple personalities. Bleuler believed there is a split from reality. Name refers to split within intellect, between intellect and emotion, between intellect and external reality.

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4
Q

Risk of developing schizophrenia

A

Around 1%; higher for those with older fathers. Typically starts in late adolescence. Earlier onset, more severe in men than women

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5
Q

Schizophrenia DSM-V Diagnostic Criteria

A

(A) 2+ of following present for significant portion of 1-month period. At least one from 1-3: (1) Delusions, (2) Hallucinations, (3) Disorganized speech, (4) Disorganized or catatonic behavior, (5) Negative symptoms such as diminished emotional expression or avolition.

(B) Dysfunction in work, interpersonal relationships, or self-care

(C) Signs of disturbance for at least 6 months, with 1+ month of symptoms in (A)

(D) Rule out schizoaffective, depressive, bipolar disorders

(E) Symptoms not from physiological effect of substance or medical condition

(F) If with autism or communication disorder, must have delusions or hallucinations for 1+ months

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6
Q

Delusions

A

Erroneous belief that is firmly held despite contradictory evidence. Examples include: made feelings or impulses (one’s thoughts/feelings/actions being caused by external agents); thought broadcasting (private beliefs are known to others); thought insertion or withdrawal (thoughts given and taken by outside source); reference (neutral environmental event believed to have special and personal meaning)

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7
Q

Hallucinations

A

Sensory experience that seems real but occurs in absence of external stimulus. May have personal meaning. Can occur in any sensory modality, but auditory most common. Studies suggest may be misperceived subvocal speech

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8
Q

Disorganized speech

A

Failure to make sense despite conforming to semantic/syntactic rules of speech. Words and word combinations sound communicative but listener is left without understanding.

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9
Q

Disorganized and catatonic behavior

A

Impairments of goal-directed activity in areas such as work, social relationships, self-care. Catatonia involves almost no movement, sometimes in an unusual posture.

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10
Q

Positive vs. Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia

A

Positive symptoms: excess or distortion in normal behavior or experience (delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, disorganized behavior.

Negative symptoms: absence or deficit of certain behaviors (blunted emotions, alogia, avolition)

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11
Q

Other psychotic disorders

A

Schizoaffective, Schizophreniform, Delusional, and Brief Psychotic Disorders.

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12
Q

Schizoaffective Disorder

A

Hybrid of schizophrenia and mood disorder. Mood symptoms have met full criteria and present for 50% of illness

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13
Q

Schizoaffective vs. Schizophrenic Disorders

A

Find info

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14
Q

Schizophreniform Disorder

A

Like schizophrenia but only 1-6 months long

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15
Q

Schizophreniform vs. Schizophrenic Disorder

A

Schizophreniform lasts for shorter period of time than schizophrenia (1-6 vs. 6+ months)

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16
Q

Delusional disorder

A

Have delusions but otherwise with normal behavior

17
Q

Delusional vs. Schizophrenic Disorder

A

Schizophrenia requires delusions + another symptom; delusional disorder involves delusions but otherwise normal behavior.

18
Q

Delusional vs. Schizotypal Personality Disorder

A

Must find

19
Q

Brief Psychotic Disorder

A

Usually lasts only several days

20
Q

Genetic factors of schizophrenia

A

Genetic factors clearly implicated - having relative with the disorder significantly increases chances. Revealed by twin studies, adoption studies, molecular genetic studies (unlikely that linked to a single gene). Genetically influenced but not determined - interplay between genetic and environmental factors

21
Q

Prenatal and Perinatal Factors of Schizophrenia

A

Prenatal infection, rhesus incompatibility, early nutritional deficiencies, perinatal birth complications

22
Q

Neurodevelopmental Perspective of Schizophrenia

A

Thought that a lesion in brain lies dormant until some normal development changes expose the problems that result from brain abnormality. May involve abnormalities in cell migration during second trimester. May notice developmental traits such as motor abnormalities, low positive facial emotion, high negative face emotion

23
Q

Brain abnormalities

A

There are abnormalities associated with schizophrenia but they are not found in all patients. Enlarged brain ventricles for ex.

24
Q

Dopamine Hypothesis

A

Believed that too much dopamine leads to schizophrenia. Evidence: pharmacological success of Chlorpromazine, amphetamine induced psychosis, L-Dopa, Dopamine and Salience, Increased density of D2 receptors and increased sensitivity.

25
Q

Glutamate Hypothesis

A

Schizophrenia involves dysregulation in glutamate systems. Evidence: dopamine inhibits glutamate

26
Q

Familial hypotheses

A

Were hypotheses about bad parenting causing schizophrenia but it looks like schizophrenia may cause the communication problems. Critical, hostile, over-involved expressed emotion (of family member about patient) seems to have something to do with relapse.

27
Q

Psychosocial/cultural factors

A

Urban living, immigration, cannabis abuse

28
Q

Diathesis-Stress Model of Schizophrenia

A

Genetic Factors + Prenatal/Perinatal Factors -> Brain Vulnerability. + Stress/Developmental Processes -> Psychosis

29
Q

Recovery rate

A

Antipsychotic drugs improved prognosis. Currently 38% percent function well 15-25 years later. Long-term institutionalization for 12%. Shorter life expectancy and higher suicide rates.

30
Q

Pharmacological Approaches to Schizophrenia

A

First-Generation Antipsychotics: Dopamine Antagonists to tackle positive symptoms. Side effects - involuntary movements, tardive dyskinesia, neuroleptic malignant syndrome

Second-Generation Antipsychotics: fewer extrapyramidal (motor abnormality) side effects, no support for belief that these are more effective. Side effects - drowsiness, weight gain, diabetes.

31
Q

Psychosocial approaches to schizophrenia

A

Family therapy, case management, social-skills training, cognitive remediation, cognitive-behavioral therapy.