* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Schizophrenia & Other Psychotic Disorders
History of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
Dementia with Lewy bodies wikipedia , lookup
Critical Psychiatry Network wikipedia , lookup
Child psychopathology wikipedia , lookup
History of psychiatric institutions wikipedia , lookup
Pyotr Gannushkin wikipedia , lookup
Rumination syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Bipolar II disorder wikipedia , lookup
Alcohol withdrawal syndrome wikipedia , lookup
History of psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Emergency psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Schizoaffective disorder wikipedia , lookup
Spectrum disorder wikipedia , lookup
Causes of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
Parkinson's disease wikipedia , lookup
Dementia praecox wikipedia , lookup
Conversion disorder wikipedia , lookup
Abnormal psychology wikipedia , lookup
Dissociative identity disorder wikipedia , lookup
Mental status examination wikipedia , lookup
Antipsychotic wikipedia , lookup
Controversy surrounding psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Glossary of psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Causes of schizophrenia wikipedia , lookup
Schizophrenia wikipedia , lookup
Schizophrenia & Other Psychotic Disorders Schizophrenia: Lost touch with reality Disruption of: Normal thought processes Perception Personality Affect SYMPTOMS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA symptoms – deviant behaviors delusions, hallucinations, thoughts negative symptoms – deficit symptoms Lack of normal function positive POSITIVE SYMPTOMS disorder – disrupted cognitive functioning most dramatic and obvious symptom thought loosening of associations word salad – seems as if sense Neologisms – new words clang associations - sounds of words POSITIVE SYMPTOMS • delusions – not objectively true • not be accepted as true within culture • person holds firmly in spite of contrary evidence POSITIVE SYMPTOMS Delusions • • • • • Paranoid/persecution Grandeur Capgas syndrome – double of other’s Cotard’s syndrome – part of body changed Change vs. fixed POSITIVE SYMPTOMS • • • • hallucinations – perceptual experiences that feel real although there is nothing to perceive Visual Auditory tactile Attention Problems Difficulty focusing attention Esp. during first stages Bombarded Attention is critical to functioning Negative Symptoms Negative = absent 25% patients NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS Anhedonia Avolition Alogia flat - interest - movement - content or quantity of speech or blunted affect OTHER SYMPTOMS – a psychomotor disturbance of movement and posture catatonia catatonic stupor waxy flexibility OTHER SYMPTOMS affect – unusual and sometimes bizarre emotional responses inappropriate OTHER SYMPTOMS of insight – lack of awareness that one’s experiences are unusual or abnormal lack Schizophrenia is not… Split personality disorder Multiple personality disorder Schizophrenia = “splitting of the mind” Ambivalence CLINICAL COURSE course – specific pattern of changes in symptomatology over time clinical prodromal phase active phase residual phase Schizophrenia 1% lifetime prevalence Equal men & women Consistent across cultures (differences in dx and recovery) More in lower class Early life Women later AGE OF RISK FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA (A) Age at first diagnosis 20 15 Proportion 10 Males Females 5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 Age (in years) Source : Adapted from I.I. Gottesman, Schizophrenia Genesis: The Origins of Madness (New York: Freeman, 1991.) AGE OF RISK FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA (B) Age of risk 100 80 Cumulative 60 Proportion 40 Males Females 20 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 Age (in years) Source : Adapted from I.I. Gottesman, Schizophrenia Genesis: The Origins of Madness (New York: Freeman,1991.) TYPICAL COURSES FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA (A) CHRONIC GRADUAL ONSET & VERY POOR PROGNOSIS TYPICAL COURSES FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA (B) EPISODIC OCCASIONAL EPISODES WITH NEARLY NORMAL FUNCTIONING BETWEEN THEM TYPICAL COURSES FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA 22% (C) SINGLE EPISODE BRIEF PERIOD OF PSYCHOSIS & NEARLY COMPLETE RECOVERY WITH NO OTHER EPISODES SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual characterized by disorganized speech or behavior and flat or inappropriate affect SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual characterized by psychomotor disturbance of movement and posture SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual characterized by fixed delusions of persecution SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual diagnosis used for people who meet the criteria for schizophrenia but do not clearly fit into the above subtypes SUBTYPES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA disorganized catatonic paranoid undifferentiated residual symptom patterns found in individuals with schizophrenia during periods of relative remission including cognitive slippage Development of Schizophrenia Abnormal signs childhood Less positive affect More negative affect Older adults ↓ positive symptoms ↑ negative symptoms CAUSES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA THEORIES OF CAUSE Hypothesized causes/predispositions Not mutually exclusive Theories are specific - overlap CAUSES of Schizophrenia 4. Genetics Neurobiology Psychological and Social Psychodynamic Theories Diathesis – Stress Models 1. 2. 3. Genetics & Schizophrenia Genes are responsible for some people’s vulnerability to schizophrenia Inherent general predisposition, not type Twin & Adoption Studies Genetic studies of families do not allow us to decide: Environment? (Nurture) Genetics? (Nature) Twin & Adoption studies allow us to separate effects Genetic Markers Smooth-pursuit eye movement Neurobiology of Schizophrenia 1. 2. 3. 4. Dopamine is too active Antipsychotic drugs work. They decrease dopamine (by blocking) They produce side effects similar to Parkinson’s. Parkinson’s = too little dopamine L-dopa, given to Parkinson’s patients, which increases dopamine, can produce schizophrenialike symptoms Amphetamines, which increase dopamine, can make schizophrenia worse Brain Structure Enlarged ventricles Adjacent brain parts underdeveloped? Frontal lobes = less active neurotransmitters Viral Infection Risk Recent introduction of schizophrenia (1800s) ↑ in urban areas Prenatal exposure to flu Prenatal brain damage Psychological & Social Influences - Stress Retrospective research shows role of stressful events in onset Prospective research – relapse preceded by higher rates of stress Might also increase depression, which increases risk of relapse Psychological & Social Influences - Family Schizophrenogenic mothers Double bind communication Psychological & Social Influences - Family Expressed Emotion Consists of: In discharged patients, those with less family contact had fewer relapses Criticism/disapproval Hostility/animosity Emotional overinvolvement 3.7 times increase in relapse (!) Expressed Emotion High: “I’ve tried to jolly him out of it and pestered him into doing things. Maybe I’ve overdone it. I don’t know.” Low: “I just tend to let it go because I know that when she wants to speak, she will speak.” Diathesis Stress Models X Treatment of Schizophrenia 1. Biological 2. Psychosocial Biological Interventions Historical biological interventions include: Lobotomies Sever frontal lobes from lower portions of brain Insulin coma therapy Electroconvulsive therapy Antipsychotic Medication Medical breakthrough 1950s – neuroleptics 60% effective Mostly effect positive symptoms Effect dopamine, but other neurotransmitters as well Antipsychotic Medication New antipsychotics Clozapine Risperidone Olanzapine Less side effects than early antipsychotics Problem: Medication Compliance 7% of patients refuse to take prescribed antipsychotic medication Negative relationships with doctors Cost of medication Lack of social support Negative side effects 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. tardive dyskinesia in 20% of long-term users Beliefs about medication use (25%) Psychosocial Interventions Inpatient treatment most treatment, until recently Decreased due to changes in involuntary hospitalization laws 200,000 with serious disorders are homeless Psychosocial Interventions Token economies Contribute to increased self-care More discharge Psychosocial Interventions Social skills building Model pieces Role-play Practice in vivo Psychosocial Interventions Behavioral Family Therapy Psychoeducation – symptoms, causes, medication compliance Communication skills Problem-solving skills Most beneficial if ongoing Living with Schizophrenia 40-60% of patients live with their family 10-20% of homeless individuals have schizophrenia 10% of patients will commit suicide 50% will experience comorbid substance abuse 33% will experience physical/sexual assault Prognosis of Schizophrenia Predicting outcome is virtually impossible Recent research has indicated prognosis is better than originally expected 20-40 year longitudinal studies Some research suggests 20-50% “fully recover” later in life