1: Schizophrenia and Anxiety Flashcards

1
Q

What percentage of the population have schizophrenia?

A

1%

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2
Q

At what age does schizophrenia usually present?

A

Late teens to mid 20s

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3
Q

What was dementia first described as?

A

Dementia praecox

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4
Q

Who was the first person to use the word schizophrenia and in what year?

A

Bleuler in 1908

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5
Q

What are some of the negative symptoms of schizophrenia?

A

Reduced speech
Difficulty with goal-orientated behaviour
Neglect of personal heigine
Flattened affect

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6
Q

What is flattened affect?

A

Reduced expression of emotion

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7
Q

What are some of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia?

A

Disorganised speech (A lack of logic and constantly changing topics)
Hallucinations (often auditory)
Delusions
Disorganised or catatonic behaviour

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8
Q

What fraction of people with schizophrenia have delusions?

A

4/5

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9
Q

What is the most common type of hallucination?

A

Auditory

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10
Q

What are the cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia?

A

Poor attention
Impaired verbal working memory
Impaired executive function - inflexiable thinking style

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11
Q

What are relapses and remissions in schizophrenia?

A

Symptoms go through cycles of improving and being more severe

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12
Q

What is the DSM criteria for diagnosis of schizophrenia?

A

2 or more symptoms present for at least 1 month and 1 present for 3 months

Ongoing signs of illness for 6 months

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13
Q

What disorders are often confused with schizophrenia?

A

Mood disorders (Depression or bipolar)
Substance abuse triggering an episode
brain damage
Huntington’s, parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s all have psychotic symptoms

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14
Q

if one identical twin has schizophrenia, what is the chance the other twin will also have it?

A

48%

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15
Q

What percentage of people with schizophrenia have no other relatives with it?

A

85%

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16
Q

How is the age of the father linked to the development of schizophrenia?

A

The older the father is when the baby is conceived, the higher the chance of schizophrenia

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17
Q

What is the interaction between genetics and environment?

A

They could trigger certain genes to be expressed

18
Q

What neurodevelopmental factors contribute to schizophrenia?

A

Infections during pregnancy
traumatic birth
low birthweight
cannabis in teenage years

19
Q

How is the brain structure of people with schizophreia different from others?

A

They have larger ventricles and less grey and white matter

20
Q

How is over-pruning linked to schizophrenia?

A

Too much pruning in the prefrontal cortex meaning communication between different areas of the brain is disrupted

21
Q

What neurotransmitters have been implicated in schizophrenia?

A

Dopamine

Glutamine

22
Q

What is the dopamine hypothesis?

A

That dopamine levels are linked with schizophrenia

23
Q

What evidence is there for the dopamine hypothesis?

A

Antipsychotic drugs work on dopamine receptors
PET scans show higher levels of dopamine synthesis in patients
High doses of drugs that increase dopamine cause psychotic symptoms
4/10 of the top associated genes are also linked to dopamine

24
Q

What are typical antipsychotic drugs?

A

They act on D2 receptors and have many side effects such as tardive dyskinesia

25
Q

What is tardive diskinesia?

A

Involuntary movements of the facial muscles

26
Q

What are atypical antipsychotics?

A

They act on several classes of receptors including serotonin

Less side effects which are less severe

27
Q

What are the limitations of the dopamine hypothesis?

A

1/3 of patients don’t respond to antipsychotics

The relationship between dopamine and negative symptoms is unclear

28
Q

What is the glutamate hypothesis?

A

It’s due to a dysfunction of the NMDA glutamate receptor

29
Q

What is the evidence for the glutamate hypothesis?

A

Ketamine was usedd as an anastetic and when patients came round, they had similar symptoms to schizophrenia
Mice bred with less receptrs have signs of schizophrenia

30
Q

How many people are affected by anxiety at some point in their lives?

A

30%

31
Q

What is generalised anxiety disorder?

A

Excessive worry, restlessness and trouble sleeping

32
Q

What is a panic disorder?

A

Reoccuring, unexpected panic attacks

33
Q

What is agoraphobia?

A

Where we excessively think our environment is unsafe

Such as not wanting to leave the house

34
Q

How long do panic attacks usually last?

A

Less than 30 minutes

35
Q

How is the sympathetic nervous system involved in panic attacks?

A

It triggers the fight or flight response

36
Q

How is the parasympathetic nervou system involved in panic attacks?

A

It slows down the body and dampens the fight or flight response

37
Q

How is the amygdala linked to anxiety?

A

It recieves sensory infomration from the cortex, thalamus and hippocampus and projects it to brain areas involved in emotional responses
Activated when we see fearful faces

38
Q

In what part of the amygdala is sensory information processed?

A

The basolateral nucleus

The information is then passed to the central nucleus

39
Q

How is the hippocampus linked to anxiety?

A

More concerned with factual information than emotion

Such as what the fear is paired with

40
Q

How is the ventromedial prefrontal cortex linked to anxiety?

A

Involved in the enxinction of fear

41
Q

How do benzodiazipines treat anxiety?

A

They enhance the activity of GABA