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Psychosis - Integrating subjective experiences, psychodynamic understandings and biological knowledge Toronto, June 5 2008 Johan Cullberg MD PhD Ersta Sköndal University College, Stockholm The ego’s ongoing construction of the world •Rapid changes between perceptions and interpretations •The ego constructs a ”Gestalt” •This dialectics is abolished in dreaming and (partly) in psychosis Psychosis: •Failure in creating a correct ”Gestalt” of the outer world •Regressive creating of meaning •Inner, private world is given priority •Meaning is more important than rationality First Episode Psychosis - model Recovery 1st 2nd critical period critical period DUP Prodromal phase Relapse Treatment Psychosis phase Recovery phase JC okt 03 jc 4 Stages and subjective experiences in psychosis: 1: Prodromal phase - days or months • Withdrawal tendencies – social, working or study problems • • • • • Affective outbursts Increased inner speed Premonition of mental break-down Compensatory strategies Depression and panic attacs jc 5 2: PSYCHOSIS PHASE: (weeks - months) • • • • • “Am I in the world or am I the world?” Regressive strategies to create meaning Hallucinations confirm delusional thinking Thoughts and actions controlled by others Resistance to relying in anyone/anything from outer world (care, medication, trust etc) • Omnipotence and deep loneliness jc 6 3: Late psychotic phase: • Delusions more often questioned and less • • • • maintained “Islands of normality” increasingly frequent Depressive thoughts more prominent through reality confrontation Tendency to seek protection in psychosis Cooperation with therapist deepening – who can be trusted? jc 7 4: Recovery phase: Remaining psychotic symptoms or resolution (most often within 3 months) • • • • • • • Separation between inner and outer world Psychotic “shadows” may remain Pain, shame - relief PTSD (traumatic memories from care)? Denial of psychosis? Are the bridges burned? Life with the memory of psychosis and awareness of one’s vulnerability jc 8 From Disease model (Kraepelin around 1890) to Vulnerability-Stress model (Zubin 1977) or Vulnerability-Interactional stress model (Strauss 1983) jc 9 Dimensions of vulnerability to psychosis A: Genetic B: Pre/perinatal injuries C: Early trauma, Attachment problems jc 1 factor- low risk 2 factors higher risk 3 factors high risk 10 Three phases of Schizophrenia (Ciompi) Biological factors Phase 1 Psykosocial factors Early traumatic experiences etc Genetics, perinatal injuries Premorbid vulnerability Stress Phase 2 Acute psychosis Psyko-social factors Phase 3 Some disability or ”chronicity” Complete remission or a few symptoms jc 11 Long-term schizophrenia • Around 1/3 of first episode psychosis patients tend to ”chronify” • Inner world is mixing up with external world • Deficient control of the ”expected future” • Deficient awareness of body? • But often: fantasy, warmth, sense of humour • Between two fires: overstimulation and understimulation • Neuroleptic medication 25-40% better than placebo. Risk for overmedication! • With network and relations, job and supported living, most patients recover jc 12 The schizophrenic person’s personality change – a dynamic partial explanation • The early vulnerability also implies a sensitization of self image – ”outsider” • The first psychosis is a mental trauma which further disturbs the self-image • A partial withdrawal to the inner world means a higher security of self • ”Schizophrenia” jc 13 The affective vulnerability • A thin ”mental skin” • Complex and highly charged inner mental representations of good/bad • Easily evoked symbolic connections external/inner world • Lowered ability to deal with separation, frustration, falling in love, aggression • Psychotherapy and low dose medication jc 14 What is curative? • Milieu – low stimulation level, security, coherence • Medication when needed – lowest effective dose • Therapeutic alliance – respect, interest, non-intrusive warmth jc 15 Attitudes towards the patient -according to the Danish OPUS project: n A long awaited guest who you want to feel welcome and at home during a long visit. n A collaborator, whose insights and attitudes are decisive for the outcome. n An individual with personal preferences that should be taken into account in the treatment to the greatest extent possible. Merete Nordentoft, Bispebjerg Hospital, psykiatrisk afdeling, 2006 Antipsychotic medication – the patient’s friend or enemy? • ”Therapeutic window” at 1-4 mg haldol-eqv in f.e.p. • Higher dose gives side-effects without increasing anti• • • • • psychotic effects Side-effects appear soon after intake, anti-psychotic effects after 1-5 days – slow increase of doses! Antipsychotic effects because of more indifference which lowers vulnerability to psychotic thoughts? (Healy, Kapur) High dose inhibits the dopamine systems of frontal lobes and thus down-grades the motivational affects Moderate dose give a chance for psychological restructuring, high doses lower vitality The effect is 30-50% betterjc than with no medication 17 Thresholds for antipsychotic drug effects in FEP D2 receptor occupancy (%) 100 80 EPS threshold Antipsychotic effect threshold 60 40 20 0 0 1 2 3 Dose/plasma concentration jc 4 5 Farde et al (1992) 18 ”Hearing inner voices” • When you hear constant inner voices and know they don’t come ”from outside” - you don’t suffer from a psychosis but from a disorder of perception – a minor disturbance of the brain • Such voices rarely are helped with medication – still many psychiatrists are tempted to continue med which may lower your quality of life • You need psychological support for better dealing with the voices jc 19 Psychological treatments and psychosis – different models should be encouraged in the team • Dynamic models: Identifying relational or developmental crisis, trauma (separation, frustration, stress). Important in early phase – brief and schizophreniform psychoses • Cognitive models: Taking control over voices, depressive thinking, investigting delusional thinking. Important in late phases • Educational models: How to think about psychosis, treatments, relapses – all cases jc 20 Coherence and Hope jc 21