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Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders

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Title: Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders


1
Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders
  • Barlow and Durand
  • Chapter 13

2
Schizophrenia
3
Schizophrenia
  • Disrupts

4
Schizophrenia
  • Used to be called dementia praecox
  • Schizophrenia is a combination of Greek words
    that mean split mind
  • There are a number of identifying Sx and
    behaviors that are not necessarily shared by all
    people with the Dx.

5
Clinical Description of Schizophrenia
  • Age of onset is
  • Psychosis

6
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Active phase Sx
  • Positive Sx
  • Negative Sx

7
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Disorganized Sx
  • Must have 2 or more positive, negative, or
    disorganized Sx present for at least 1 month to
    be Dx

8
DSM-IV-TR Criteria
  • A. Characteristic Sx 2 or more of the following
    each present for a significant portion of time
    during a 1 month period

9
DSM-IV-TR Criteria
  • Note Only 1 of criterion A is necessary if
    delusions are bizarre or hallucinations consist
    of a voice keeping a running commentary of the
    persons behavior and thoughts or of 2 or more
    voices conversing with each other

10
DSM-IV-TR Criteria
  • B. Social/Occupational dysfunction Since the
    onset 1 or more areas of functioning is markedly
    below the level achieved prior to onset
  • C. Duration

11
DSM-IV-TR Criteria
  • D. Shizoaffective and Mood Disorder Exclusion
  • E. Substance/General Medical Condition Exclusion
  • F. Relationship to a pervasive developmental
    disorder If there is a Hx of autistic disorder
    or other PDD this Dx is only given if prominent
    delusions or hallucinations are also present for
    at least 1 month

12
Positive Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Delusions
  • Can be delusions of grandeur or of persecution
  • Capgras Syndrome

13
Positive Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Cotards Syndrome
  • A good example of delusions are personal TV
    messages
  • Hallucinations

14
Positive Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Auditory Hallucinations
  • People appear unusually occupied and sometimes
    respond to the non-existent voices when they are
    hearing them
  • Brain Imaging shows us Brocas area is very
    active when

15
Positive Sx of Schizophrenia
  • This suggests that people with auditory
    hallucinations are not actually hearing the
    voices of others,

16
Negative Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Absence or insufficiency of normal behaviors
  • Emotional withdrawal
  • Social withdrawal
  • Apathy
  • Poverty of thought or speech

17
Negative Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Avolition
  • Alogia
  • Anhedonia
  • Affective Flattening 2/3 experience this

18
Negative Sx of Schizophrenia
  • This appears to be a difficulty in EXPRESSING not
    in EXPERIENCING emotion

19
Disorganized Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Disorganized speech
  • Tangentiality
  • Loose Association or Derailment

20
Disorganized Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Inappropriate Affect
  • Catatonia Motor dysregulation that ranges from
    wild agitation to immobility

21
Schizophrenia Subtypes
  • Catatonic
  • Disorganized
  • Paranoid
  • Undifferentiated

22
Schizophrenia Subtypes
  • Residual people who have had at least 1 episode
    of schizophrenia but are no longer manifesting
    major Sx of (may have some leftover Sx)
  • Leftover Sx may include

23
Schizophreniform Disorder
  • The experience of schizophrenia for a few months
    only then return to normal life
  • Can disappear because of successful treatment or
    for unknown reasons
  • Lifetime Prevalence 0.2

24
Schizophreniform Disorder
  • Characteristics include
  • Onset of psychotic Sx within 4 weeks of first
    noticed changes in behavior
  • Confusion at the height of psychotic episode
  • Good premorbid social and occupational
    functioning
  • Absence of flat affect

25
Schizoaffective Disorder
  • Persons who exhibit both Sx of Schizophrenia and
    the characteristics of Mood Disorders
  • Criteria
  • Presence of mood disorder
  • Delusions or hallucinations for at least 2 weeks
    in the absence of prominent mood Sx

26
Delusional Disorder
  • Persistent beliefs that are contrary to reality
    in the absence of other Sx of Schizophrenia
  • Delusion is not the result of an organic factor
    (brain seizure)
  • No flat affect, anhedonia, or other negative Sx
  • However, they do become socially isolated because
    they are suspicious of others
  • Often persists over several years

27
Subtypes of Delusions
  • Erotomanic
  • Grandiose
  • Jealous

28
Subtypes of Delusions
  • Persecutory
  • Somatic
  • Delusions in this sense are different from
    schizophrenic delusions because they could be
    happening, but they arent (Not quite so bizarre)
  • Age of onset is much later
  • More female than male

29
Brief Psychotic Disorder
  • One or more positive Sx occur within a month
  • Then the person regains full ability to function
    as well as before the episode
  • Often precipitated by extreme stress

30
Shared Psychotic Disorder
  • An individual develops delusions simply because
    of their close relationship with a delusions
    individual
  • (Mass Hysteria?)

31
Statistics on Schizophrenia
  • Generally chronic
  • Significant relationships are hard so many of
    them do not marry
  • Tx can help improve
  • Roughly equal rates for males and females
  • 0.2-1.5 in the general population

32
Statistics on Schizophrenia
  • Onset is early adulthood (16-25)
  • Appear to show some improvement into late
    adulthood less Positive Sx and more Negative Sx
  • Relapse rates

33
Cultural Factors
  • Universal affects every racial and cultural
    group studied so far
  • Course and outcome are what vary from culture to
    culture

34
Possible Genetic Causes
  • Genes are responsible for making some individuals
    vulnerable to developing schizophrenia
  • Family studies
  • Twin studies

35
Possible Genetic Causes
  • Adoption studies show 10.3 of adoptees with
    schizophrenia had mothers with schizophrenia as
    opposed to a control group where 1.1 of adoptees
    had schizophrenia if mothers did not have
    schizophrenia

36
Possible Genetic Causes
  • Offspring of Twins studies show if your parent
    is an identical twin with schizophrenia you have
    a 17 change of having schizophrenia
  • You have the same percent change if you are the
    child of an unaffected twin whose identical twin
    has schizophrenia (17)

37
Possible Genetic Causes
  • Same percent change if your parent is a fraternal
    twin with schizophrenia (17)
  • However, if your parent is a fraternal unaffected
    twin whose twin has schizophrenia you only have a
    2 chance of developing schizophrenia
  • In other words

38
Possible Neurobiological Causes
  • Dopamine system TOO active in persons with
    schizophrenia

39
Possible Neurobiological Causes
  • There are contradictions to this theory
  • 1. A significant number of persons with
    schizophrenia are not helped by dopamine
    antagonists

40
Possible Neurobiological Causes
  • 2. Although the meds block the reception of
    dopamine right away reduction of Sx of
    schizophrenia takes several weeks
  • 3. Clozapine
  • Problem may be more complex

41
Possible Causes in Brain Structure
  • Abnormally large lateral ventricles means near
    parts of brain are too small either
    underdeveloped or atrophied
  • This seems to rely on sex, age, and duration of
    disorder
  • Frontal lobes less active in persons with
    schizophrenia

42
Possible Causes Related to Viral Infection
  • You do not hear of accounts of schizophrenic
    behavior prior to 1800
  • Could this be a virus?
  • Prenatal influenza (2nd trimester)

43
Psychological and Social Influences
  • These may initiate schizophrenia in a person with
    a predisposition to the disorder
  • Stress
  • Expressed Emotion in families
  • If High Expressed Emotion more likely to relapse

44
Myths about Causes of Schizophrenia
  • Schizophrenogenic Mothers cold and rejecting
  • Double-Bind Messages

45
Treatment of Schizophrenia
  • Neuroleptic Drugs
  • Psychosocial Tx in combination
  • Reduces relapse
  • Compensates for skills deficits
  • Improves med compliance

46
Biological Tx Interventions
  • Past Traditions to Present
  • Insulin shock therapy
  • Prefrontal lobotomies
  • Psychosurgery
  • ECT
  • Neuroleptics (1950)

47
Biological Tx Interventions
  • Neuroleptic Drugs work on the positive Sx of
    schizophrenia
  • They are dopamine antagonists
  • Now they have fewer side effects than ever before
  • Problem

48
Why Dont People Take Meds?
  • Bad patient doctor relationship
  • Cost
  • Poor social support
  • Think they are better because reduction of Sx
  • Negative side effects
  • Akinesia
  • Tardive Dyskinesia

49
Why Dont People Take Meds?
  • Side effects such as the previous can be
    irreversible
  • Up to 20 of people who take meds for long
    periods of time develop them

50
Psychosocial Tx Interventions
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