Title: PSY 346 Presentation DiathesisStress Model of Schizophrenia Nov 202003
1PSY 346 Presentation Diathesis-Stress Model of
Schizophrenia Nov 20/2003
2Diathesis-Stress
- Diathesis Predisposition for disease that may be
genetic, and encompasses cognitive sets, chronic
feelings of helplessness, past experiences, and
overall psychological hardiness.
- Stress An environmental/life event that disrupts
homeostasis and occurs when the situation is
appraised as exceeding the persons adaptive
resources. Stress is moderated through the use
of coping strategies, resilience to stress
strategies, social support, emotional release,
and exercise.
3Diathesis-Stress Model
- The interaction between a constitutional
predisposition and an environmental trigger that
affects the course rather than the cause of
schizophrenia
4Schizophrenia is Characterized by
- Cognitive distortions (inability to maintain
focused thought, too much extraneous sensation) - Brain malfunctioning (elevated dopamine and
serotonin levels, and excessively large vesicles)
- Symptoms include both positive and negative
symptoms.
5Positive Symptoms
- the behavior a person actually displays
- delusions (inappropriate or unwanted beliefs or
thoughts) that are firmly held personal beliefs
that have no basis in reality (paranoia believe
others are persecuting/conspiring against you) - hallucinations (perceiving in the absence of an
external physical stimulus) such as hearing
voices (instructing you, carrying on conversation
with you) - bizarre behavior or inappropriate affect (out of
proportion emotional response)
6Negative Symptoms
- lack of expected functioning slow deterioration
of functioning - withdrawal from society (exacerbate their
isolation) - less sociable (dulled emotions, inappropriate
emotions, and change in speech) - exhibit catatonia (long periods of being
virtually motionless)
7Causes
- Genetic Factors MZ twins have a 50 chance of
schizophrenia diagnosis - Environmental Factors Influenza received during
the 2nd trimester of pregnancy and relationship
between socioeconomic status (monetary deficits
may be due to their condition)
8Schizophrenia
- Developmental events and precursors include
elevated rates of soft neurological signs and
birth complications, slow habituation and high
baseline autonomic activity, high rate of
developmental disorders of speech/language and
overall and specific cognitive deficits. Brain
morphological studies and intelligence testing
provide further evidence of deterioration.
- Early Onset Schizophrenia (EOS) is a rare
disorder with a prevalence of 1/10 000 before the
age of 12 (increases dramatically around
puberty/early adolescence). It can be understood
as a progressive-deteriorating developmental
disorder.
9- Positive symptoms increased linearly with age,
whereas negative symptoms were most frequent on
early childhood and adolescence. - Negative symptoms at the beginning of the episode
could be potentially hidden by the positive
symptoms and probably became evident after the
disappearance of the positive symptoms as a
result of neuroleptic treatment.
10Neurobiological and Psychological Changes During
Puberty and Adolescence
- Myelination of the association cortex and the
limbic cortex. This is a risk factor because
neocortical and limbic circuits might not attain
adequate function until adolescence. - Maturation of the prefrontal cortex responsible
for executive functions in the fronto-temporal
network - The role of gonadal hormones (estrogen increases
the frequency of synapses in the rat hippocampus,
androgens increase the synaptic elimination in
the rat) - Decline of cerebral plasticity
- Changes in the dopaminergic innervation and
periadolescent synaptic pruning
11Morphology
- Brain Morphology shows a decreased total cerebral
volume, decreased gray matter volume, increased
ventricular volume and decreased midsaggital
thalamic area (midsaggital area of the corpus
callosum was significantly increased). There
exists a strong correlation between negative
symptoms and total cerebral volume.
12Schizophrenia reflects a great degree of social
impairment resulting in deficit. The concept of
childhood attentional deviance has three
particular dimensions of relevance, which
include social sensitivity, social indifference,
and social isolation, which can be further
explained by
- Attentional deficit at an early age which may be
an important link to later social dysfunctioning. - Attentional impairment may be primary to the
social deficit - Attentional deficit seems to remain stable
throughout development - Attentional deficit can be tested reliably at
approximately 2.5 years (relationship between
attentional dysfunction and social skills becomes
significant at mid-adolescence when they first
display their social deficits)
13Manifestation
- The manifestation of schizophrenia at an early
age is not a sudden phenomenon, but is the result
of many factors that contribute to etiology, age
at onset, symptomatology, course, and outcome.
- Obstetric complications are not developmental
precursors, rather they are events that might
have great impact on future development. The
same applies to other stable traits such as
attentional dysfunction or event related
potentials that can be looked at as a stable
vulnerability marker for schizophrenia. Other
influences that change over time include
speech/language ability, scholastic performance,
intelligence, and transient symptoms of pervasive
development.
14Peak of manifestation occurs around puberty.
Three potential arguments include
- The possibility that certain genes that offer
predisposition to schizophrenia could be
activated during adolescence/puberty. There have
been no obtained empirical results, but potential
regions have been listed for gene susceptibility. - Neurobiological/psychosocial maturation processes
could either trigger the disorder or lower the
threshold for the manifestation around
puberty/adolescence - Biological conditions (genetic risks, birth
complications, neurosensory and neuromotor
deficits) and developmental precursors (overall
specific cognitive impairments, delayed
speech/language development, poor adjustment in
school) could accumulate and interact with each
other and lead to a manifestation of a
schizophrenic breakdown when a certain
individually variable threshold is reached.
15Schizophrenia
- Pre-schizophrenic children reflect a reduced
degree of success in social adjustment which
progresses throughout childhood/adolescence into
developmental gender impairment (reflecting an
existing degree of impairment in the premorbid
functioning)
- Developmental deviance and abnormalities in
premorbid social interaction and language-related
functions act to precipitate an earlier age of
onset in schizophrenia. The effect of these
factors on age of onset (more pronounced in
adolescent cases than for adult onset patients)
acts to influence social function and personality
traits into adulthood
16Early Onset Schizophrenia (EOS onset prior to
age 18, mean 14.2) has been associated with
- Delayed motor/speech milestones (developmental
deviance ranging from disruptive behavior to
withdrawal) of spelling/reading and other related
academic performances - Poor childhood premorbid adjustment continuing
throughout adolescence (particularly in males who
show a greater vulnerability) - Inclusion of schizophrenia spectrum traits
reflecting the continual abnormalities of
development regarding adjustment/personality - Overall increased impairment in speech/language
17Late Onset Schizophrenia
- Late Onset Schizophrenia (LOS/AOS onset beyond
18 years of age, mean 22.9) shares a number of
clinical, neuropsychological, and nonspecific MRI
characteristics with early onset schizophrenia.
- LOS is associated with
- a reduced dosage necessity of neuroleptic
treatment - larger thalamic volume (MRI)
- mild impairment in cognitive functioning
18Chromosomal Abnormalities
- schizophrenia onset emerges from the disruption
of a particular locus - provides a permissive genetic environment for
mutations elsewhere in the genome to become
expressed as psychotic illness
- The chromosomal abnormalities inherent in the
complexity of the genetics of Schizophrenia may
represent a linkage to a susceptibility locus
such that
19GABA
- GABA function is decreased in brain areas of
structural change (represented in MRI
schizophrenics). The decreased levels of GABA
are associated with negative symptoms, poor
premorbid functioning (putative neurodevelopment)
and with decreased dopamine and serotonin
turnover. Lower plasma GABA levels were
independently associated with larger
ventricle-to-brain ratios, lateral prefrontal
atrophy, and poor premorbid social functioning
20Substance Abuse Patterns in Schizophrenia
- Schizophrenia onsets might be precipitated by the
onset of drug abuse (and to a lesser extent
alcohol abuse) in persons directly exposed to
schizophrenia predisposition. Age of onset is
significantly lower for drug abusers compared to
the control population. As many as 82.7 have a
history of drug abuse habits within the time
frame of the initial stage.
21Substance Abuse
- Alcohol abuse led to a small likelihood of
premature precipitation of psychosis, by acting
to trigger the first psychotic episode.
Substance abuse is associated with an increase in
positive symptoms especially hallucinations and
psychotic thought disorders. It is also
associated with a reduction in negative symptoms
(affective flattening). - Patients abuse drugs as a dysfunctional way of
coping with the unpleasant phenomena of bluntness
and indifference, and in so doing appear to
accept the increase in positive symptoms.
22HPA Axis
- HPA function is characterized by hypersensitivity
to stress and increased cortisol release in
schizophrenia, which may be a triggering factor
for the psychiatric symptoms. Furthermore
dopamine activation stimulates the HPA axis
through abnormal neurotransmission. The HPA axis
acts as a potentiating system responsible for the
moderation of the diathesis expression via its
effects on DA-mediated circuitry. Thus any
hippocampal damage or DA abnormalities render a
state of hypersensitivity to stress. This is
consistent with prenatal factors of
schizophrenia.
23Conclusion
- Factors of both nature and nurture debates
interact to construct our global depiction of the
diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia - Current trends in research reflect the more
medicinal/pharmacological implications and have
arisen so as to stress the role of correcting
hormonal and genetic imbalances inherent in the
affected predisposition group