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Schizophrenia Other Psychotic Disorders Three Criteria Sets for all Psychotic Disorders • 1st – applies to all disorders in group; defines requirements for psychosis • 2nd – defines attributes common to all schizophrenic disorders • 3rd – requirements about etiology, social impairment, & diagnostic precedence applying to many but not all disorders • All 3 sets tend to overlap Schizophrenia: Splitting of the Mind Most debilitating & baffling mental illness • Distorted perception of reality • Impaired capacity to reason, speak, & behave rationally or spontaneously • Impaired capacity to respond spontaneously with appropriate affect & motivation – Incongruity between different mental functions • As betw thought content & feeling • As betw feeling & overt activity – Someone who laughs at a funeral Clinical Presentation • Criticism of DSM-IV is that system becomes diagnosis by exclusion • Criteria as a whole does not characterize • Examples include: – Hypervigilant accountant suspicious others are plotting against him/her – Housewife believes she is controlled by dead mother’s voice – Withdrawn & apathetic college student brooding incessantly about reality of existence Important factors • Specific set of symptoms, yet variety in severity from person to person • Also variety with one person from one period of time to another • Generally controlled with treatment – More than 59% with continuous treatment recover – Medication for entire life – Treatment allows most people to work, live with families, & enjoy friends Causes • Much speculation • Appears to run in families; heredity link • “Schizophrenogenic” Mother – Previous discredited theory of bad parenting; inadequate care • Susceptibility/vulnerability to illness triggered by: – Environmental events; viral infection changing body chemistry – Highly stressful situation in adult life – Combination of things Heredity • With 1 parent with diagnosis – 8-18% even if adopted by mentally healthy parents • Both parents – Risk 15-50% • Mentally healthy biological parents, but adoptive parents with diagnosis • 1% chance of developing disorder • Same chance as in general population • One identical twin with disorder • 50-60% sibling with identical genetics will also have disorder • Do not inherit directly – Appears when body is undergoing hormonal & physical changes of adolescence – Some researchers believe “dormant” during childhood • Emerges as body & brain undergo changes in puberty Key Points • Age at onset – Generally late adolescence, early adulthood; rare later in life unless onset before 45 yrs • Duration – 6 months or more – Unless Schizophreniform • Loss of prior level of functioning • Tendency toward chronicity • Symptoms usually appear gradually – Preparatory or prodromal period • Symptoms include: – Tenseness, lack of concentration, sleep, withdraws from society – Personality changes – Work performance, appearance & social relationships deteriorate Positive & Negative Symptoms • Diagnose when positive symptoms for minimum of 2 weeks (other symptoms 6 mos.) – Added features – Excesses or distortions • Hallucinations • Delusions Negative Symptoms – Lack of something • Disorganized speech • Diminution or loss of normal functioning Relapse & Remission Phases • Common • Symptoms worsen or become better in cycles • May suffer: – Delusions, hallucinations, or disordered thinking & speech • Appearance normal at times until psychotic phase – Cannot think logically – May lose all sense of identity – May lose sense of significant others Delusions & Hallucinations • Delusions – Thoughts that are fragmented with no basis in reality – Also differ in degree of conviction – Someone may be spying or planning to harm • Strong belief – May be wrong but has some basis in reality • If bizarre delusions – no other Criteria “A” needed – Someone can insert thoughts into brain • Hallucinations – Sensory perception with compelling sense of reality of true perception but occurs W/O external stimulation of relevant sensory organ – May or may not have insight into having hallucinations • Distinguish from illusion– actual stimulus misperceived /misinterpreted • If voices are commenting or conversing – no other Criteria “A” needed • Ask if “voices” client hearing are own voice? • Most common are voices – Visual, tactile next Distortions of Ability • Loss of knowing whether an event or situation perceived is real – Waiting at a crosswalk, a voice says “you smell really bad” • Real voice • Jogger passing by • In my head? • Normal behaviors much of time: – Not so out of touch of realization that: • we eat 3 meals a day • sleep at night • drive on street etc. Subtypes • Priority of patterns – Catatonic, if signs prominent • rigidity, lack of response or acute agitation – Disorganized • Disorganized speech, disorganized behavior, flat or inappropriate affect – Paranoid • Preoccupation with delusions or auditory hallucinations • No flat or inappropriate affect, catatonic behavior, disorganized speech, or disorganized behavior – Undifferentiated • Symptoms meet criteria A but not for paranoid, catatonic, or disorganized types – Residual • does not require fulfillment of common criteria set for schizophrenia • Attenuated form of criteria Continuum of Schizophrenia Based on duration of episode Brief Psychoticschizophreniformschizophrenia • Brief Psychotic Disorder – Duration 1 day – 1 month – Eventual complete recovery • Schizophreniform – Duration 1 month – 6 months – Impaired social or occupational functioning not required buy may occur • Schizophrenia – Duration more than 6 months Data • • • • • Affects men/women equally Estimates of developing disorder = 1% Onset in women typically 5 years later 150 of 100,00 persons develop Approximately ¼ hospital beds & ½ psychiatric beds in US – More than any other illness • Relatively rare • Most catastrophic mental illness – Early age of onset, lifelong disability, emotional & financial devastation – Federal figures reflect $30 - $48 billion in direct medical costs, loss of productivity, & social security pensions Treatment • No single “correct” treatment useful since syndrome consisting of a number of disorders • Most effective – – – – – – – – Psychopharmacology & psychosocial therapies Antipsychotic medications treatment of choice since 50’s Brings biochemical imbalances closer to norm Reduces hallucinations, delusions Helps maintain coherent thoughts Compliance necessary 60-80% not taking medication relapse in 1st yr Relapse rates fall to 10% if medication continued Schizoaffective Disorder: Bipolar or Depressive Type • Continuously meet Criterion A • Also major depressive episode, manic episode, or mixed episodes • Includes delusions, hallucinations of 2 weeks time in absence of mood symptoms Delusional Disorder • Persistent nonbizarre delusions – 1 or more systematic & circumscribed delusions often of persecutory nature • 1 month time • Never met Criterion “A” for Schizophrenia • Function reasonable well – aside from impact/ramifications of delusions • If mood episodes, total duration brief • Relatively uncommon with .05-.1% lifetime risk • Usually mid-life disorder noticed by friends/family – Hypersensitive, argumentative, & litigious types • Usually no voluntary help sought Types of Delusional Disorders • Erotomania – Another person, usually of higher status, is in love with person • Grandiose – Inflated worth, power, knowledge, identity, or special relationship to deity or famous person • Jealous – Individual’s sexual partner is unfaithful • Persecutory – Being persecuted for no apparent reason • Somatic – Having some physical defect or general medical condition • Mixed Type – More than 1 type with no predominant theme • Unspecified Type Shared Psychotic Disorder • Person develops delusion(s) – similar in content to already established delusion – of another person with whom close relationship Psychotic Disorder Due to General Medical Condition • Prominent delusions or hallucinations • Judged caused by general medical condition • Do not occur exclusively during course of Dementia or Delirium Substance-Induced Psychotic Disorder • Prominent delusions or hallucinations associated with evidence symptoms developed within 1 month of significant substance intoxication or withdrawal, or is etiologically related to medications use or toxin exposure • Specific codes determined by specific substance Psychotic Disorder NOS • Syndromes with prominent psychotic symptomatology • Symptomatology not meeting criteria for any specific Psychotic Disorder Necessary Clinical Information • History of: – documented psychiatric illness – socially unusual, odd, or isolative behavior – substance abuse – medical illnesses • Current experience – hallucinations or odd perceptual experiences • Disorganized thought or speech • Delusions • Negative symptoms – (e.g., flat affect, avolition (no goal directed activity) • Depression or mania • Duration of symptoms Treatment of Delusional Disorders • Extraordinarily difficult to treat • Longer symptoms present, more oppositional to simple treatments • Some culturally-induced syndromes may respond to relocation – return to country of origin • Emphasis on trusting relationship • Systematic desensitization effective • Antipsychotic medication takes “edge” off delusions – Psychosocial treatment more possible • Antidepressants also proved helpful Side Effects of Medication • Most side effects disappear after few weeks – – – – Dry mouth Blurred vision, constipation Drowsiness Dizziness due to drop in blood pressure • Some irreversible & serious side effects – Tardive Dyskinesia (TD) • 20-30% develop • Small tongue tremors, facial tics, abnormal jaw movements • May progress into thrusting & rolling tongue, lip smacking, pouting, grimacing, chewing or sucking motions • Also spasmodic movements • Usually do not progressively worse – Severe in less than 5% • Can fade if medication discontinued • Effectiveness of ending psychoses, validates risk