Psychotic disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Common types/themes of delusions

A

Persecution/paranoia (people after me)
Ideas of reference (TV talking to me)
Thought broadcasting (others can read my thoughts) or thought insertion (thoughts are being placed in my head)
Grandeur (I am the king of the mountaintop)
Guilt (I’m responsible for WWII)
Somatic delusions (I have __ disease)

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2
Q

What is an illusion?

A

Misperception of sensory stimulus

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3
Q

What is a hallucination?

A

Sensory perception without sensory stimulus

-Auditory, visual, olfactory, or tactile

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4
Q

Differential diagnosis (broad) of psychosis

A
Psychosis 2/2 medical condition
Substance or medication induced
Delirium/dementia
Bipolar disorder, manic or mixed episode
Major depression with psychotic features
Brief psychotic disorder
Schizophreniform disorder
Schizoaffective disorder
Delusional disorder
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5
Q

Medical causes of psychosis

A
CNS disease (stroke, MS, cancer, Alzheimer's, PD, HD, syphilis, epilepsy, encephalitis, HIV, etc)
Endocrinopathies (Addison's, Cushing's, thyroid, hyper/hypocalcemia, hypopituitarism)
Nutritional/vitamin deficiency (B12, folate, niacin)
Other (Rheum disease, porphyria)
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6
Q

DSM-V criteria for psychotic disorder due to other medical condition

A

Prominent hallucinations or delusions
Sypmtoms do not occur only during an episode of delirium
Evidence from history/physical/lab support medical cause

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7
Q

Medications that can cause medication-induced psychotic disorder

A

Anesthesia, antibiotics, steroids, anti-parkinsonian drugs, anticonvulsants, antihistamines, anticholinergics, antihypertensives, NSAIDs, digitalis, methylphenidate, chemotherapy

Substance-induced: Alcohol, cocaine, LSD, PCP, ecstasy, cannabis, benzos, barbiturates, inhalants

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8
Q

Positive symptoms of schizophrenia

A

Hallucinations, delusions, bizarre behavior, disorganized speech

*Respond well to antipsychotic meds

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9
Q

Negative symptoms of schizophrenia

A

Flat or blunted affect, anhedonia, apathy, alogia, lack of interest in socialization

*Often resistant to treatment

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10
Q

Cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia

A

Impairments in attention, executive function, and working memory

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11
Q

Three phases of schizophrenia

A

Prodromal phase: decline in functioning, social withdrawal, irritability
Psychotic phase: Perceptual disturbances, delusions, and disordered thought
Residual phase: Follows an episode of active psychosis. Mild hallucinations or disturbances and negative symptoms

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12
Q

Diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia

A

Two or more of the following present for at least one month:
-Delusions
-Hallucinations
-Disorganized speech
-Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior
-Negative symptoms
Significant social, occupational, or self-care functional impairment
Duration of illness>6mos
Symptoms not due to substance or medical condition

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13
Q

Typical findings on psychiatric exam in patients with schizophrnia

A
Disheveled appearance
Flat affect
Disorganized thought process
Intact procedural memory and orientation
Auditory hallucinations
Paranoid delusions
Ideas of reference
Lack of insight
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14
Q

Difference in male vs. female presentations of schizophrenia

A

Men tend to present in early/mid 20s, women in late 20s

Men tend to have more negative symptoms and worse outcomes

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15
Q

Epidemiology of schizophrenia

A

Ages 15-55
Strong genetic component
Often comorbid substance abuse

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16
Q

Pathophysiology of schizophrenia

A

Increase in dopaminergic activity in mesocorticolimbic tracts (–> positive symptoms)
Decrease in dopaminergic activity in prefrontal-cortical tracts (–> negative symptoms)

17
Q

Effects of antipsychotic blockade of dopaminergic activity in tuberoinfundibular pathway

A

Reduces tonic dopaminergic inhibition of prolactin release, leading to hyperprolactinemia (–> gynecomastia, galactorrhea, sexual dysfunction, menstrual irregularities)

18
Q

Effects of antipsychotic blockade of dopaminergic activity in nigrostriatal pathway

A

Parkinsonism/extrapyramidal signs (tremor, rigidity, slurred speech, akathisia, dystonia, etc)

19
Q

Other (besides dopamine) neurotransmitter abnormalities in schizophrenia

A

Elevated serotonin (some second gen antipsychotics [risperidone and clozapine] block serotonin)
Elevated norepinephrine
Decreased GABA
Decreased number of glutamate NMDA receptors

20
Q

Factors associated with better prognosis in schizophrenia

A
Later onset
Good social support
Positive symptoms
Mood symptoms
Acute onset
Females
Few relapses
Good premorbid functioning
21
Q

Factors associated with worse prognosis in schizophrenia

A
Early onset
Poor social support
Negative symptoms
Family history
gradual onset
Male
Many relapses
Poor premorbid functioning
Substance use
22
Q

Pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia

A

Typical or atypical antipsychotics

23
Q

Which antipsychotics are more likely to produce extrapyramidal signs/symptoms (EPS)?

A

Typical, high-potency (haloperidol) antipsychotics

24
Q

Treatment for EPS

A

Anticholinergics (benztropine, diphenhydramine), beta-blockers for akathisia (or benzos)

25
Q

Low-potency typical antipsychotic meds have what receptor activities?

A

HAM
Histaminergic blockade
alpha-adrenergic blockade
Muscarinic blockade

26
Q

Main side effect of atypical antipsychotics?

A

Metabolic syndrome (insulin resistance, weight gain, increased BP, hyperlipidemia)

**Less with aripiprazole or ziprasidone

27
Q

What is schizophreniform disorder?

A

Features of schizophrenia for <6 months but >1mo

28
Q

What is brief psychotic disorder?

A

Features of schizophrenia for <1mo

29
Q

Prognosis and treatment of schizophreniform disorder?

A

1/3 of patients recover completely, 2/3 progress to schizoaffective or schizophrenia

Treat with 6 month course of antipsychotics and psychotherapy

30
Q

Diagnostic criteria for schizoaffective disorder

A
  • Major depressive or manic episode during which psychotic symptoms are present
  • Delusions or hallucinations for 2 weeks in the absence of mood disorder symptoms (this criterion distinguishes between schizoaffective and mood disorder with psychotic features)
  • Mood symptoms present for majority of illness
  • Symptoms not due to effects of a substance/medical condition
31
Q

Treatment for schizoaffective disorder?

A

Supportive psychotherapy
Antipsychotics (atypicals may help more with mood)
Mood stabilizers, anti-depressants, or ECT may help

32
Q

Diagnostic criteria for delusional disorder

A

One or more delusions for at least 1 month
Doesn’t meet criteria for schizophrenia
Functioning in life not significantly impaired, and behavior not obviously bizarre

33
Q

Types of delusions

A
Erotomanic (this person is in love with me)
Grandiose (I am awesome)
Somatic (I have liver failure)
Persecutory (they are after me)
Jealous (she's cheating on me)
Mixed 
Unspecified
34
Q

Treatment for delusional disorder

A

Supportive therapy

Antipsychotic medications