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Chapter 16 Specific Disorders and Treatments

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Title: Chapter 16 Specific Disorders and Treatments


1
Chapter 16Specific Disorders and Treatments
2
Progress in Abnormal Psychology
  • The growth of understanding of mental disorders
    and their treatment has paralleled the progress
    of medical science.
  • Although we have much yet to learn, we now can
    make accurate distinctions between a wide range
    of disorders and we can tailor treatments to meet
    the needs of those suffering from specific
    disorders.

3
Module 16.1
  • Anxiety and Avoidance Disorders

4
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Anxiety refers to a certain amount of fear and
    caution in the face of potential hazards.
  • A certain amount of anxiety is normal.
  • Anxiety is considered pathological when it
    interferes with daily functioning.

5
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is the
    experience of almost constant and exaggerated
    worry.
  • There is no basis for the worries but the person
    is tense, irritable and tired.
  • About 5 of the general population will
    experience GAD.
  • Often it is co-diagnosed with other mood
    disorders such as depression.

6
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Panic disorder (PD) is characterized by frequent
    periods of anxiety and occasional attacks of
    panic.
  • Panic attacks involve rapid breathing, increased
    heart rate, chest pains, sweating, trembling and
    faintness.
  • Panic attacks usually last just a few minutes,
    but can be much longer.

7
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Panic disorder is experienced by 1-3 of adults
    and occurs in many cultures.
  • More women than men are diagnosed with Panic
    Disorder.
  • Hyperventilation, or rapid deep breathing, is a
    key symptom.

8
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Hyperventilation causes the body to react as if
    suffocation were occurring.
  • The persons subjective interpretation of the
    symptoms of hyperventilation can cause an
    increase in panic or a calming down.
  • People with panic disorder tend to interpret
    these episodes as uncontrollable and life
    threatening.
  • The constant anxiety they experience increases
    the likelihood of further panic attacks.

9
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Treatments for panic disorder include
  • Psychotherapy
  • Anti-depressant drugs
  • Advice Dont worry about panic attacks they
    wont kill you.

10
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Common co-existing disorders include
  • Social phobia severe avoidance of other people
    and fear of doing anything in public.
  • Agoraphobia an intense fear of open or public
    places.

11
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Phobias
  • Avoidance behaviors are highly resistant to
    extinction.
  • Phobia is the most common type disorder involving
    avoidance behaviors.
  • A phobia is strong and persistent fear of a
    specific object or situation so strong it
    interferes with daily living.

12
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Anxiety
  • Phobias
  • The Prevalence of Phobias
  • Not all extreme fears qualify as phobias.
  • About 11 of U.S. adults suffer from a phobia at
    some point in their lives.
  • About 5-6 are experiencing a phobia at any given
    time.
  • Phobia usually does not persist across the
    lifetime many young adults lose them by middle
    age.

13
  • Figure 16.2 Most phobias do not last a lifetime.
    Young people with phobias often lose them by
    middle age.

14
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Phobias
  • Acquiring a phobia
  • Some fears are innate but many are learned.
  • Some phobias can be traced to a specific event.
  • The early behaviorists were the first to
    demonstrate how fears might be learned.
  • This does not account for the fact that some
    phobias are much more common and easily acquired
    than others.

15
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Phobias
  • The most common phobias include
  • Open spaces
  • Closed spaces
  • Heights
  • Lightening and thunder
  • Certain animals (snakes, spiders, dogs)
  • Illnesses/germs

16
  • Figure 16.4 A lab-reared monkey learns to fear
    snakes from the reactions of a wild-reared
    monkey. But if the snake is not visible, the
    lab-reared monkey fails to learn any fear.

17
  • Figure 16.4 A lab-reared monkey learns to fear
    snakes from the reactions of a wild-reared
    monkey. But if the snake is not visible, the
    lab-reared monkey fails to learn any fear.

18
  • Figure 16.4 A lab-reared monkey learns to fear
    snakes from the reactions of a wild-reared
    monkey. But if the snake is not visible, the
    lab-reared monkey fails to learn any fear.

19
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Phobias
  • Behavior therapy for phobias
  • Systematic desensitization reduces fear by
    gradually exposing people to the object under
    controlled conditions. Virtual reality is now
    being employed for this kind of therapy.
  • Flooding or implosion a sudden and large-scale
    exposure to the object under controlled
    conditions.

20
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Phobias
  • Drug therapies for phobias and anxieties
  • Benzodiazepines, a common type of tranquilizer,
    are often prescribed for anxiety disorders.
  • They suppress symptoms only temporarily and can
    be addictive.
  • Anti-depressants, which are not likely to be
    taken habitually, are used more effectively.

21
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • There are two distressing symptoms that comprise
    obsessive-compulsive disorder.
  • Obsessions are repetitive, unwelcome streams of
    thought.
  • Compulsions are repetitive, almost irresistible
    actions.
  • Obsessive thoughts generally lead to compulsive
    actions.
  • Checking and cleaning are two very common
    compulsive behaviors.

22
Disorders Characterized by Excessive Avoidance
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Therapies for obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Exposure therapy is very similar to systematic
    desensitization.
  • The patient is exposed to the situation that
    brings on the compulsive behavior, but is
    prevented from engaging in it.
  • The most common drug treatments for this disorder
    utilize clomipramine and other serotonin reuptake
    inhibiters.

23
Anxieties and Avoidance
  • Phobias and anxiety disorders involve the
    interaction and influence of cognition and
    emotion upon each other.
  • People who suffer from these conditions are aware
    that their reactions are exaggerated, but this
    awareness doesnt cure the problem.
  • These disorders are challenging but psychologists
    continue to improve the efficacy of available
    treatments.

24
Module 16.2
  • Substance-Related Disorders

25
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Individuals who find it difficult or impossible
    to quit a dangerous habit are said to have an
    addiction to it or a dependence on it.
  • People vary widely in how this affects their
    daily lives and functioning.

26
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Nearly all addictive drugs stimulate the dopamine
    receptors in the nucleus accumbens.
  • Activation of these synapses causes increased
    attention.
  • This activation is accompanied by feelings of
    great pleasure.

27
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • There are two symptoms involved in the
    development of a drug addiction.
  • Tolerance decreased effects of a given dose.
  • Withdrawal unpleasant sensations when the drug
    is not used (or too little is used given the
    development of tolerance).
  • Activities and substances that are not drugs can
    produce addictions suggesting that addiction is
    a function of the person, not the drug alone.

28
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Is substance dependence a disease?
  • It depends in part on how we define disease.
  • Psychologists currently favor the use of
    continuum from no addiction to severe
    addiction.

29
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Nicotine dependence
  • Cigarette smoking is based on nicotine addiction.
  • People are generally able to quit smoking more
    easily if they have a replacement source of
    nicotine (i.e. a patch).
  • Low-nicotine/low-tar cigarettes do not help
    people to quit.

30
  • Figure 16.7 Low-nicotine cigarettes have a row
    of small holes in the filter room air is
    supposed to enter through those holes when the
    smoker inhales and therefore dilute the tobacco
    smoke. If people smoke such cigarettes without
    covering the air holes, little tar and nicotine
    pass through the cigarette, as we see from the
    relatively clean filter tip. However, if people
    cover the holes with their fingers or tape, they
    will
  • receive about as much tar and nicotine as they
    would from any other filtered cigarette.

31
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Alcoholism
  • Alcoholism is defined as the habitual overuse of
    alcohol.
  • Treatment of chronic alcoholism is very
    difficult.
  • In order for treatment of alcoholism to be
    effective, we need to detect the problem in its
    early stages.
  • We need to identify the factors that put certain
    people at risk.

32
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Alcoholism
  • Type I alcoholism develops gradually over the
    lifespan.
  • It is equally prevalent in men and women.
  • It is generally less severe in its health
    consequences.
  • Type II alcoholism has an early onset.
  • It is much more prevalent in men and more severe.

33
  • Table 16.3 Type I and Type II alcoholism

34
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Alcoholism Risk factors
  • Research studies indicate that tendency to
    addiction is influenced by genetics.
  • Type II alcoholism shows a strong genetic basis.
  • Some people with no family history of alcoholism
    develop an alcohol problem.

35
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Alcoholism Risk factors
  • Exposure to parental conflict, inadequate
    supervision, and abuse can increase the
    likelihood of alcoholism emerging later in life.
  • Culture also has an influence prevalence rates
    vary in different nations and ethnic groups.

36
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Treatment for alcoholism
  • It is very difficult for most people to quit
    alcohol and the other drugs.
  • Only 10-20 are successful and relapses are very
    common.
  • Many recovering addicts seek help from
    mental-health professionals or self-help groups.
  • Such help improves the chances of successful
    recovery, but offers no guarantees.

37
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Treatments for alcoholism
  • Detoxification is a program of supervised
    recovery provided in a hospital setting.
  • Outpatient mental-health treatment has about the
    same rate of success as detoxification.

38
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Treatments for alcoholism
  • The most widespread treatment for alcoholism is
    offered by Alcoholic Anonymous (AA).
  • AA is a self-help group comprised of people who
    abstain from alcohol use and offer help and
    support to each other.

39
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Treatments for alcoholism
  • Antabuse is the trade name for disulfiram.
  • Alcoholics who take Antabuse daily become very
    sick when they drink alcohol.
  • This treatment is only moderately effective.

40
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Treatments for alcoholism
  • Controlled drinking refers to reducing
    consumption of alcohol from dependent/abusive to
    moderate levels.
  • Some physicians believe that abstinence is
    workable for all alcoholics and believe this is a
    viable alternative.
  • Harm reduction is a similar approach applied to
    drug abuse.
  • These methods are highly controversial

41
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Opiate dependence
  • A very difficult withdrawal syndrome complicates
    recovery from dependence on opiate drugs (i.e.
    heroin, morphine).
  • Some opiate addicts go cold turkey in order to
    stop using.

42
Substance Dependence (Addiction)
  • Opiate dependence
  • Recovery programs commonly offer methadone as a
    less dangerous replacement for opiates.
  • This is a harm reduction strategy that allows
    recovering opiate addicts to remain employed and
    avoid criminal behavior.

43
  • Table 16.4 Comparison of methadone with morphine

44
Substances, the Individual, and Society
  • How we handle the problem of substance dependence
    and abuse in our society remains an area of
    intense debate.
  • Our current strategies have not eliminated
    widespread use.
  • As a citizen, you may be called upon to think
    about these issues and help to shape changes in
    our national drug policy. As you have learned,
    there are complex and difficult issues involved.

45
Module 16.3
  • Mood Disorders

46
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Major depression
  • Major depression is an extreme condition.
  • It usually persists for months.
  • The person experiences little interest in
    anything, little pleasure, and little motivation
    to be productive.

47
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Major depression
  • Loss of interest in food and sex are common.
  • The person has feelings of worthlessness, guilt
    and powerlessness over their lives.
  • Sleep abnormalities are associated with
    depression (there is a characteristic rapid onset
    of REM sleep).
  • The person may attempt suicide.

48
  • Figure 16.9 When most people go to sleep at their
    usual time, they progress slowly to stage 4 and
    then back through stages 3 and 2, reaching REM
    sleep toward the end of their first 90-minute
    cycle. Depressed people, however, reach REM more
    rapidly, generally in less than 45 minutes. They
    also tend to awaken frequently during the night.

49
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
  • Consistent depression associated with a
    particular season of winter is called seasonal
    affective disorder.
  • It is most common in areas that have little
    sunlight in the winter.
  • It can be relieved by light therapy, which
    requires the depressed person to sit in front of
    a bright light for a few hours each day.

50
  • Figure 16.10 Most people feel slightly better
    during the summer (when the sun is out most of
    the day) than during the winter (when there are
    fewer hours of sunlight). People with seasonal
    affective disorder (SAD) feel good in the summer
    and seriously depressed in the winter (or good in
    the winter and depressed in the summer). Seasonal
    affective disorder is commonest in far northern
    locations such as Scandinavia, where the summer
    days are very long and bright and the winter days
    are very short and dark. The disorder is
    unheard-of in tropical locations such as Hawaii,
    where the amount of sunlight per day varies only
    slightly between summer and winter.

51
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Bipolar disorder
  • This condition was once referred to as
    manic-depressive disorder.
  • It involves a cycling of mood between periods of
    depression and periods of mania.
  • Mania is a state of extreme exuberance and
    agitation.

52
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Genetic predisposition to depression
  • Having close biological relatives who were
    diagnosed with depression increases ones
    probability of becoming depressed.
  • Having adoptive relatives who were depressed also
    increases that probability, but not as much.

53
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Genetic predisposition to depression
  • The probability is especially high if one has
    biological relatives who were diagnosed with
    depression before age 30.
  • There is probably no one gene that causes
    depression.
  • Genes probably influence temperament and
    therefore also the way people respond to events
    in their lives.

54
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Sex differences in depression
  • Before adolescence, depression is about equally
    common in boys and girls.
  • From adolescence onward, women are about twice as
    likely to experience depression as men.

55
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Sex differences in depression hormones
  • Women experience more rapid hormonal changes than
    men do (menstrual cycles, pregnancy, childbirth
    and menopause).
  • Postpartum depression is triggered by the rapid
    hormonal changes that follow childbirth.
  • However, the hormone levels of depressed women
    are not significantly different that those of
    non-depressed women.

56
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Sex differences in depression coping
  • Men generally try to distract themselves when
    they are feeling depressed. Women tend to dwell
    on their feelings more.
  • Ruminating may not be useful for coping and may
    make the person feel worse.
  • This explanation does not account for why women
    and men choose different strategies.

57
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Events that precipitate depression
  • People generally become depressed after losses or
    other negative events occur.
  • There is little relationship between the scale of
    the event and the intensity and duration of the
    subsequent depression.
  • Severe losses early in life may make people more
    vulnerable to depression later on in life.

58
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Events that precipitate depression
  • Lack of social support also increases
    vulnerability to depression.
  • As in the case of stress, it is not just the
    event but also the persons interpretation of the
    events significance that influences the degree
    of depression.
  • The way people think about their lives, as well
    as the course of the events, is a factor to
    consider.

59
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Cognitive aspects of depression
  • Every person has an explanatory style in
    accounting for successes and failures.
  • Internal attributions cite causes within the
    person.
  • External attributions identify causes outside the
    person.

60
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Cognitive aspects of depression
  • People tend to be more consistent in the type of
    attributions that they use to explain their
    failures.
  • People who blame themselves for all failures,
    regardless of the circumstances, develop a
    pessimistic explanatory style.
  • They view their failures as global (consistent
    over situations) and stable (consistent over
    time).
  • Depressed people believe that every silver
    lining has a cloud.
  • -- Kalat

61
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Treatments for depression
  • Cognitive therapy helps the individual develop
    more positive beliefs.
  • Drug therapies use anti-depressant medications
    including the tricyclics, selective serotonin
    reuptake inhibitors, monoamine oxidase
    inhibitors, and atypical antidepressants.
  • St. Johns Wort is a naturally occurring herb
    that has antidepressant effects. It should not be
    used with other medications.

62
  • Figure 16.13 Antidepressant drugs prolong the
    activity of the neurotransmitters dopamine,
    norepinephrine, and serotonin. (a) Ordinarily,
    after the release of one of the
    neurotransmitters, some of the molecules are
    reabsorbed by the terminal button, and other
    molecules are broken down by the enzyme monoamine
    oxidase (MAO). (b) Selective serotonin reuptake
    inhibitors (SSRIs) prevent reabsorption of
    serotonin. Tricyclic drugs prevent reabsorption
    of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin. (c)
    MAO inhibitors (MAOIs) block the enzyme monoamine
    oxidase and thereby prolong the effects of the
    neurotransmitters.

63
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Treatments for depression
  • Electroconvulsive shock therapy (ECT) is a
    well-known but controversial treatment.
  • A brief electrical shock is administered to the
    patients head.
  • It induces a convulsion similar to an epileptic
    seizure.
  • How it works is not fully understood.

64
Mood Disorders
  • Depression
  • Treatments for depression
  • It is an effective treatment, although the
    benefits are temporary. Other treatments must be
    offered also.
  • ECT fell out of favor because it was widely
    abused (administered without patient consent,
    given too often, used as a threat).
  • It is now used only for patients who have
    treatment-resistant depressions or who are
    strongly suicidal.

65
Mood Disorders
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Bipolar disorder symptoms
  • People whose moods alternate between extremes of
    mania and depression are said to suffer from
    bipolar disorder.
  • When they are experiencing mania, they are
    constantly active and uninhibited, and may be
    very happy or very irritable.

66
Mood Disorders
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Bipolar Disorder types
  • Psychologists diagnose two types of bipolar
    disorder.
  • Bipolar I disorder involves the experience of at
    least one episode of mania.
  • Bipolar II disorder involves alternation between
    major depression and hypomania, which is a milder
    form of mania.

67
Mood Disorders
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Bipolar disorder prevalence
  • About 1 of the adult population of the U.S. has
    been diagnosed with a Bipolar Disorder.
  • It can be difficult to distinguish bipolar from
    other disorders (attention deficits, delusions
    and hallucinations are also symptoms of other
    disorders).
  • There are hereditary influences on bipolar
    disorder.

68
Mood Disorders
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Drug therapies for bipolar disorder
  • Lithium is a naturally occurring chemical that is
    used to treat mania.
  • How lithium relieves mania is not well
    understood.
  • Lithium is toxic at high doses, so a patient who
    takes it must be carefully monitored.
  • Valproate and anticonvulsant drugs are also used
    to treat bipolar disorders.

69
Mood Disorders
  • Suicide
  • Mood disorders and suicide
  • People who suffer from depression and bipolar
    disorders consider suicide. Some make attempts.
  • It is hard to know the true rate of suicide
    because some suicides are disguised to look like
    accidents.
  • Suicide rates vary as a function of gender,
    culture and age

70
  • Figure 16.15 Suicide rates differ as a function
    of age, gender, and culture. The rates shown here
    are for 1988 the rate has dropped since then for
    Hungary, presumably because of economic and
    social changes within the country. (Based on data
    of Lester, 1996)

71
  • Figure 16.15 Suicide rates differ as a function
    of age, gender, and culture. The rates shown here
    are for 1988 the rate has dropped since then for
    Hungary, presumably because of economic and
    social changes within the country. (Based on data
    of Lester, 1996)

72
  • Table 16.5 People most likely to attempt suicide

73
Mood Disorders
  • Suicide
  • Mood disorders and suicide
  • Women make more attempts but tend to employ less
    lethal means than do men.
  • There is no dependable pattern to suicide, but
    certain warning signs and risk factors are
    associated with it.
  • Previous attempts, a history of losses, a recent
    loss, and a family history are all likely to
    raise the risk.

74
Mood Disorders
  • Suicide
  • Mood disorders and suicide
  • If someone you know is thinking of suicide, try
    to treat the person as you would any other person
    who is in distress.
  • Offer support and friendship, and dont be afraid
    to ask him or her to talk about feelings.
  • Encourage the person to seek professional help if
    you sense that they are open to the suggestion.

75
Mood and Mood Disorders
  • Our capacity to experience emotions is an
    important part of our lives. We have a wide
    range of pleasant and unpleasant feelings to
    color our days.
  • Mood disorders go beyond this typical spectrum,
    and victimize the person, distorting their
    perspective. Our ways to manage these disorders
    have improved over the past decades, providing
    many with relief from this distortion.

76
Module 16.4
  • Schizophrenia

77
Schizophrenia
  • What is schizophrenia?
  • Many people confuse the term schizophrenia with
    dissociative identity disorder or multiple
    personality disorder.
  • The split in schizophrenia refers to a
    disconnection of the intellectual and emotional
    aspects of the personality.

78
  • Figure 16.16 Although the term schizophrenia is
    derived from Greek roots meaning split
    personality, it does not refer to cases where
    people alternate among different personalities.
    Rather, the term originally indicated a split
    between the intellectual and emotional aspects of
    a single personality.

79
Schizophrenia
  • What is schizophrenia?
  • The DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia requires
    that the person exhibit a complete deterioration
    of daily activities along with at least two of
    the following symptoms
  • Hallucinations
  • Delusions or thought disorders
  • Incoherent speech
  • Grossly disorganized behavior
  • Loss of normal emotional responses and social
    behaviors

80
Schizophrenia
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia
  • It is possible for two people with schizophrenia
    to have very different symptom patterns
  • The symptoms are divided into two broad types.
  • Positive symptoms are behaviors that are notable
    because of their presence (hallucinations and
    delusions, for example).
  • Negative symptoms are behaviors that are notable
    because of their absence (lack of emotional
    expression).

81
Schizophrenia
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia
  • Positive symptoms
  • Hallucinations are false sensory experiences.
  • Hearing voices is a common auditory hallucination
    of schizophrenia.
  • Visual hallucinations occur but are less common.

82
Schizophrenia
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia
  • Positive symptoms
  • Delusions are unfounded beliefs.
  • There are three types of delusions associated
    with schizophrenia persecution, grandeur, and
    ideas of reference.
  • As it is sometimes hard to distinguish between
    the unusual opinion and a delusion, one cannot
    diagnose a psychotic disorder on the basis of
    such ideas alone.

83
Schizophrenia
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia
  • Positive symptoms
  • Disordered thinking refers to a deficit in
    utilizing executive functions.
  • Deficits of attention, difficulty in switching
    rules and routines, loose associations, and
    difficulties with abstraction are all common
    types of disordered thinking in people suffering
    from schizophrenia.

84
Schizophrenia
  • Types and prevalence
  • Four types of schizophrenia
  • Undifferentiated
  • Catatonic
  • Disorganized
  • Paranoid

85
Schizophrenia
  • Four types of schizophrenia
  • The symptoms of undifferentiated schizophrenia
    include
  • Deterioration of daily functioning
  • Hallucinations
  • Delusions or thought disorders
  • Inappropriate emotions
  • None of the symptoms is unusually pronounced or
    bizarre.

86
Schizophrenia
  • Four types of schizophrenia
  • Catatonic schizophrenia is distinguished by
    prominent movement disorder, including either
  • Rigid inactivity
  • Excessive activity
  • The person is aware of his or her surroundings,
    but the nature of the individuals posture or
    movement has no relationship to the outside world.

87
Schizophrenia
  • Four types of schizophrenia
  • The symptoms of disorganized schizophrenia
    include
  • Incoherent speech
  • Extreme lack of social relationships
  • Silly or odd behavior

88
Schizophrenia
  • Four types of schizophrenia
  • The symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia include
  • Elaborate hallucinations and delusions
  • The delusions have pronounced themes of
    persecution and grandeur.
  • Other thought problems tend to be less
    pronounced, and some people with paranoid
    schizophrenia are relatively intact cognitively.

89
Schizophrenia
  • Prevalence
  • Prevalence of schizophrenia
  • About 1 of Americans are afflicted with
    schizophrenia at some time in the lifespan.
  • In general, the rates of this disorder have been
    declining over the past 100 years.
  • It occurs in many cultures, but is less common in
    developing nations.

90
Schizophrenia
  • Prevalence
  • Prevalence of schizophrenia
  • Schizophrenia is most frequently diagnosed in
    young adults.
  • Men are usually diagnosed earlier than women.
  • The onset is typically sudden, although there are
    some markers during childhood.

91
Schizophrenia
  • Causes
  • Genetic influences
  • Studies of twins and adopted children suggest a
    genetic basis for the disease.
  • In identical twins, if one member of the pair
    develops schizophrenia, there is a 50 chance
    that the other will also.
  • As with most other genetic research, it is
    difficult to control for the effects of the
    prenatal environment.

92
  • Figure 16.18 The relatives of a schizophrenic
    person have an increased probability of
    developing schizophrenia themselves. Note that
    children of a schizophrenic mother have a 17
    risk of schizophrenia even if adopted by a family
    with no schizophrenic members. (Based on data
    from Gottesman, 1991)

93
Schizophrenia
  • Causes
  • Genetic influences
  • So far researchers have not located a specific
    gene for schizophrenia.
  • It is probably not a single-gene disorder.
  • It appears that certain people develop it without
    a genetic basis.

94
Schizophrenia
  • Causes
  • Brain damage may have some influence on the
    development of schizophrenia. Brain scans
    indicate that
  • The hippocampus and parts of the cerebral cortex
    are a little smaller than normal.
  • The cerebral ventricles are larger than normal.
  • People with schizophrenia have smaller neurons
    and fewer synapses in the prefrontal cortex.

95
Schizophrenia
  • Causes
  • The neurodevelopmental hypothesis
  • The neurodevelopmental hypothesis states that
    schizophrenia is the result of nervous system
    impairments that develop before or at birth.
  • These impairments may be due to genetic or other
    reasons.
  • Non-genetic risk factors include poor prenatal
    care, difficult pregnancy and labor, and mothers
    exposure to influenza virus.

96
Schizophrenia
  • Therapies for schizophrenia
  • Drug therapies
  • Antipsychotic or neuroleptic drugs help to
    relieve the symptoms of schizophrenia.
  • These drugs work gradually and vary in
    effectiveness from patient to patient.

97
Schizophrenia
  • Therapies for schizophrenia
  • Drug therapies
  • Antipsychotic drugs work to block the production
    of dopamine at the synapses, which is evidence
    for the dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia.
  • An alternative explanation is the glutamate
    hypothesis of schizophrenia, which is supported
    by the deficient stimulation of glutamate (a
    neurotransmitter that is inhibited by dopamine).

98
Schizophrenia
  • Therapies for schizophrenia
  • Drug therapies
  • Tremors and involuntary movements begin gradually
    in people taking antipsychotics for many years, a
    condition known as tardive dyskinesia.
  • Atypical antipsychotic medications have been
    developed to provide relief without this
    troublesome side effect.
  • The atypical antipsychotics tend to suppress
    immune functioning in many patients, however.

99
Schizophrenia
  • Therapies for schizophrenia
  • Family therapy for schizophrenia
  • Because caring for a schizophrenic family member
    can be stressful, family therapy can be useful in
    a number of ways.
  • It provides direct support for the healthy family
    members.
  • It reduces the additional risk to the patient by
    circumventing negative reactions to him or her by
    family members that might promote relapse.

100
  • Figure 16.20 This graph indicates that during 2
    1/2 years following apparent recovery from
    schizophrenia, the percentage of schizophrenic
    patients who remained improved is higher in the
    group that received continuing drug treatment
    than in the placebo group. But the graph also
    shows that antipsychotic drugs do not always
    prevent relapse. (Based on Baldessarini, 1984)

101
The Elusiveness of Schizophrenia
  • Two people with schizophrenia may present their
    illness in very different ways. The causes of
    their illnesses may turn out to be very
    different.
  • Psychologists are still uncertain whether we are
    looking at one disorder or several. We still
    have so much to learn about this complex illness.
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