Schizophrenia. What is Schizophrenia? Ability to function is impaired by severely distorted beliefs, emotions, perceptions, & thought processes Comes.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders
Advertisements

Schizophrenia Human Behavior. Common Misconception… People who have schizophrenia do not have multiple personalities or a split personality They are.
Schizophrenia Disorders sec 7. objectives Define schizophrenia List the symptoms of schizophrenia (5) List contributing factors (5)
PowerPoint® Presentation by Jim Foley
EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY EIGHTH EDITION IN MODULES David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2011.
{ Schizophrenia. How Prevalent?  About 1 in every 100 people are diagnosed with schizophrenia.
PowerPoint® Presentation by Jim Foley Psychological Disorders © 2013 Worth Publishers.
Marion Weeks Jenks High School. Description and symptoms of schizophrenia Schizophrenia is a group of severe disorders characterized by the breakdown.
1 Schizophrenia Module Psychological Disorders Schizophrenia  Symptoms of Schizophrenia  Subtypes of Schizophrenia  Understanding Schizophrenia.
Psychotic Disorders Psychology. Presence of one or more of the following domains 1.delusions (grossly inaccurate beliefs) 2.hallucinations 3.Disorganized.
SCHIZOPHRENIA Literally means “Split or Broken Mind” The split is from Reality It is a severe form of psychopathology in which the person seems to disintegrate.
SCHIZOPHRENIA. WHAT IS SCHIZOPHRENIA?  One of the most heavily researched disorders  Literally means “split mind”  A split from reality (not multiple.
Schizophrenia Chronic Illness. Essential Question/Bellringer What is Schizophrenia? Bellringer: On handout.
Schizophrenia Monica Gindi Table of Contents IntroductionSymptomsOnsetCause Neurological effect DiagnosisManagement.
Schizophrenia Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School.
Schizophrenia. Basics Schizophrenia is a severe and disabling brain disorder that has effected people throughout history People with this disorder may:
Schizophrenia A group of severe disorders characterized by disorganized and delusional thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions and.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN Schizophrenic Disorders. OVERVIEW  Psychosis - profoundly out of touch with reality  Most common symptoms: changes in the way a person.
1 PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Worth Publishers, © 2007.
Module 29 Dissociative Disorders Schizophrenia Personality Disorders.
Schizophrenia.
Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Introductory Psychology Concepts Schizophrenia.
Welcome! Learning Objectives: Understand the various aspects of schizophrenia as well as the brain & genetic factors. Know what anti- social.
Schizophrenia Onset can be slow or sudden Typically exists chronically Affects ~1% of population Diagnosis must have at least two symptoms for more that.
If depression is the common cold, schizophrenia is the cancer.
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Psychological Disorders Chapter. Dissociative, Schizophrenia, and Personality Disorders Module 31.
Schizophrenia.
Section 7: Common Disorders in Adults
Schizophrenia and Related Disorders: Overview Chapter 12.
Schizophrenia Chapter 11. Schizophrenia A severe and chronic psychological disorder characterized by disturbances in thinking, perception, emotions and.
Dissociative, Schizophrenia, and Personality Disorders
Schizophrenia Chapter 14, Lecture 6 “If depression is the common cold of psychological disorders, chronic schizophrenia is the cancer.” - David Myers.
*a group of severe brain disorders in which people interpret reality abnormally *may result in hallucinations, delusions, and disordered thinking and.
Schizophrenia Module 39.
The term schizophrenia comes from two Greek words that mean splitting apart of mental functions. “Split mind“ U-Ajwbok&sns=em.
Mental Illness schizophrenia. What is schizophrenia? A chronic, severe, debilitating mental illness that affects about 1% of the population Affects men.
Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia means split mind – it is the most severe and most dreaded of all psychological disorders.
Schizophrenia True or False?  Schizophrenia exists in the same form in every culture that has been studied.  Visual hallucinations (“seeing things”)
Psychological Disorders. Dissociative, Schizophrenic and Personality Disorders Module 32.
Schizophrenia CP Psychology Mrs. Bradley What is Schizophrenia?  A mental condition involving distorted perceptions of reality and an inability to function.
Schizophrenia & Psychosis. Psychosis The word "psychosis" is used to describe conditions that affect the mind, in which there has been some loss of contact.
Module 51: Schizophrenia Abnormal Psychology Unit 13.
Psychotic Disorders Psychology. Presence of one or more of the following domains 1.delusions (grossly inaccurate beliefs) 2.hallucinations 3.Disorganized.
Dissociative, Schizophrenia, and Personality Disorders Module 31.
Module 50: Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia: the mind is split from reality, e.g. a split from one’s own thoughts so that they appear as hallucinations. Psychosis.
Schizophrenia LO: to know what it is and what it looks like!!
1 Psychological Disorders notes 16-4 objectives
Schizophrenia A. Schizophrenia is a group of severe disorders characterized by the breakdown of personality functioning, withdrawal from reality, distorted.
The literal translation is “split mind” which refers to a split from reality. A group of severe disorders characterized by the following: Schizophrenia.
Please remember to work on reading guide as you read through Unit XII Please also remember that your “Disorders Cookbook” is due next Friday. Work on it.
Bell Ringer 1. Bipolar Disorder 2. Major Depressive Disorder 3. Depression a. A down in the dumps mood that lasts for over 2 years. b. Sadness, hopeless,
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior 2e Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia (now known as Schizophrenic Disorders)
Pages in textbook Barron’s Book pages
Dissociative, Schizophrenic and Personality Disorders
Schizophrenia - AP Psychology - Andover HS
Subtitle Schizophrenia.
Minseo Kim, Diana Sattarova, Haiying Weng, Helen Zhuo
Schizophrenia Literally means “split mind,” split from reality that show itself in disorganized thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions.
Schizophrenic Disorders
Schizophrenia Human Behavior.
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior
Dissociative and Schizophrenia Disorders
68.1 – Describe the patterns of thinking, perceiving, and feeling that characterize schizophrenia.
Schizophrenic Disorders
Schizophrenia Literally means “split mind,” split from reality that show itself in disorganized thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions.
Presentation transcript:

Schizophrenia

What is Schizophrenia? Ability to function is impaired by severely distorted beliefs, emotions, perceptions, & thought processes Comes from Greek meaning “split” and “mind” –‘split’ refers to loss of touch with reality - psychosis –not dissociative state –not ‘split personality’ 1 in 100 people develop schizophrenia –24 million world wide

Symptoms of Schizophrenia

Positive (Additive) & Negative (Subtractive) Symptoms

Disorganized Speech Word Salad - a string of words that vaguely resembles language, and may or may not be grammatically correct, but is utterly meaningless. –“Tramway flogging into my question, are you why is it thirty letters down under peanut butter, what is it.” –Watch this example from Boston Legal (1 min)Watch this example from Boston Legal (1 min) Neologisms - Making up words –“I am going to the park to ride the wallywhoop.” Clang Speech - Rhyming all the words. – “Deck the halls with boughs of holly, folly, polly, dolly, hello Dolly, want a lollipop?” Echolalia - Repeating exactly what someone else has said Echopraxia - Repeating exactly what someone else has done.

Disorganized Behavior Perseveration - Repeating the same activity (word or behavior) over and over again. Dressing oddly, such as wearing many sets of clothing one over the other or wearing hats, gloves, and heavy coats in the summer. Doing things in public that are usually done only in private. –For example: urinating on a street corner.

Hallucinations – False Perceptions Auditory - hearing voices –Most common –Command hallucinations: voices giving orders Visual – seeing things not actually present Tactile – feeling skin sensations All of these contribute to delusions

Disorganized Symptoms Disorganized thought –Over-inclusion—jumping from idea to idea without the benefit of logical association –Paralogic—on the surface, seems logical, but seriously flawed e.g., Jesus was a man with a beard, I am a man with a beard, therefore I am Jesus –Maybe caused by a breakdown in selective attention Disorganized behavior and affect –behavior is inappropriate for the situation e.g., wearing sweaters and overcoats on hot days –affect is inappropriately expressed flat affect—no emotion at all in face or speech inappropriate affect—laughing at very serious things, crying at funny things –catatonic behavior unresponsiveness to environment, usually marked by immobility for extended periods

Frequency of positive and negative symptoms in individuals at the time they were hospitalized for schizophrenia. Source: Based on data reported in Andreasen & Flaum, 1991.

Subtypes of Schizophrenia DSM 5 removed these subtypes and now uses a spectrum of severity to classify schizophrenia Paranoid type –delusions of persecution believes others are spying and plotting –delusions of grandeur believes others are jealous, inferior, subservient –no cognitive impairment, disorganized behavior, or negative symptoms Catatonic type—unresponsive to surroundings, purposeless movement, parrot-like speech –waxy flexibility –highly disturbed movements or actions

Subtypes of Schizophrenia Disorganized type –delusions and hallucinations with little meaning –disorganized speech, behavior, and flat affect Undifferentiated type – exhibits symptoms of schizophrenia but can’t be fit into one of the 3 subtypes.

Schizophrenia: An Example Watch Module 26 from The Brain dvd (5 min).Module 26 from The Brain dvd –Online Version (8 min)Online Version As you watch Gerald write down what symptoms you see him demonstrating. What subtype of Schizophrenia would you predict he has?

DSM 5 removed these subtypes and now uses a spectrum of severity to classify schizophrenia. They are helpful though in remembering the different kinds of symptoms that can accompany the disorder.

Prevalence of Schizophrenia Onset of schizophrenia typically occurs during young adulthood. –Males have earlier onset 18 to 25 for men 26 to 45 for women Approximately 1.2% of Americans (3.2 million) have the disorder Worldwide, about 1% of the population will experience at least one episode of schizophrenia at some point in life

Course of Schizophrenia: The ¼, ¼, ½ Rule Acute/Reactive Schizophrenia – develops rapidly usually after a stressful event. High rate of recovery Chronic/Process Schizophrenia – develops slowly, often with negative symptoms, low recovery rate Enormous individual variability About 1/4 of those who experience an episode of schizophrenia recover completely Another 1/4 experience recurrent episodes, but often with only minimal impairment of functioning The other 1/2, schizophrenia becomes a chronic mental illness, and the ability to function normally in society may be severely impaired.

Causes of Schizophrenia

POSSIBLE BIOLOGICAL FACTORS

The Dopamine Theory Theory: Schizophrenia is caused by excess of receptors for dopamine –Potential cause for positive symptoms Drugs that reduce dopamine reduce symptoms Drugs that increase dopamine (amphetamines & cocaine) can produce symptoms even in people without the disorder Dopamine theory not enough; other neurotransmitters involved as well

Other Biological Factors About half the people with schizophrenia show some type of brain structure abnormality Brain structure and function –enlarged cerebral ventricles and reduced neural tissue around the ventricles Shrinkage found in cortex, corpus callosum, & thalamus –PET scans show reduced frontal lobe activity –Increased activity in Thalamus (filters incoming info) when experiencing hallucinations –Increased activity in Amygdala for those with paranoia

Brain Activity & Tissue Loss One five-year prospective study compared brain structure changes in normal adolescents and adolescents with early onset schizophrenia Gray matter tissue loss ranged from about 1 percent in the normal teens to more than 5 percent in the schizophrenic teens The amount of gray matter loss was directly correlated to the teenage patient’s clinical symptoms –More rapid gray matter losses in the temporal lobes were associated with more severe positive symptoms –More rapid gray matter losses in the frontal lobes were strongly correlated with the severity of negative symptoms PET scans of brain activity during schizophrenic hallucinations reveal activity in the left auditory and visual areas of the brain, but not in the frontal lobe, which is normally involved in organized thought processes.

The Shrinking of the Schizophrenic Brain Among adolescents who suffer a relatively rare childhood - onset schizophrenia, MRI scans by Paul Thompson and his colleagues (2001) revealed a much-greater- than-normal loss of cerebral cortex tissue between the ages of 13 & 18

Overpruning Results in Enlarged Ventricles

Not Just Brain Abnormalities at Fault Some people with schizophrenia do not show brain structure abnormalities The evidence is correlational The kinds of brain abnormalities seen in schizophrenia are also seen in other mental disorders

POSSIBLE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS

Viral Infection Theory Might be caused by exposure to an influenza virus or other viral infection during prenatal development or shortly after birth Children whose mothers were exposed to a flu virus during the second trimester of pregnancy show an increased rate of schizophrenia Schizophrenia occurs more often in people who were born in the winter and spring months, when upper respiratory infections are most common One study found traces of retrovirus in nearly half of people with schizophrenia while finding virtually none in healthy people.

Malnutrition & Schizophrenia Children who were in their mothers' wombs during the period of great famine in China later developed schizophrenia at roughly twice the usual rate. (Data from St. Clair & others, 2005.) Maternal stress may “turn on” genes that predispose schizophrenia

GENETIC FACTORS

Schizophrenia and Genetics Risk increases with genetic similarity Children of two schizophrenia victims Lifetime risk of developing schizophrenia for relatives of a schizophrenic General population Siblings Children Fraternal twin Identical twin

Developing Schizophrenia The lifetime risk of developing schizophrenia varies with one's genetic relatedness to someone having this disorder. Across countries, barely more than 1 in 10 fraternal twins, but some 5 in 10 identical twins, share a schizophrenia diagnosis. (Adapted from Gottesman, 2001.)

The Heritability of Schizophrenia The researchers looked for signs of schizophrenia in the biological and adoptive relatives of people who had been adopted at an early age and either did or did not subsequently develop schizophrenia. The results here are the percentage of relatives who showed either schizophrenia or a milder disorder now called schizotypal personality disorder. (Data from Kety & others, 1976.)

POSSIBLE PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS

Unhealthy Family Environment Individuals who are genetically predisposed to develop schizophrenia may be more vulnerable to the effects of disturbed family environments

Finnish Adoptive Family Study of Schizophrenia Found that children whose biological mother had schizophrenia had a much higher rate of schizophrenia than did the control group when they were raised in a psychologically disturbed adoptive family When raised in a psychologically healthy adoptive family, they were no more likely than the control group to develop schizophrenia. One-third of the adopted children with no genetic history of schizophrenia developed symptoms of a serious psychological disorder if they were raised in a psychologically disturbed family environment Conclusion: a healthy psychological environment may counteract a person’s inherited vulnerability for schizophrenia, but a psychologically unhealthy family environment can act as a catalyst for the onset of schizophrenia

Other Family Influences on Schizophrenia Dysfunctional Family variables: –parental communication that is disorganized, hard-to-follow, or highly emotional –expressed emotion highly critical, over-enmeshed families

Possible Early Warning Signs of Schizophrenia A mother whose schizophrenia severe & long lasting Birth complications – oxygen deprivation or low birth weight Separation from parents Short attention span & poor muscle coordination Disruptive or withdrawn behavior Emotional unpredictability Poor peer relations or solo play

Development Model of Schizophrenia This model depicts researchers' understanding of the contributions of genes, environmental experiences, and the person's present neural and behavioral condition to the development of schizophrenia and, in some cases, its progression into a chronic condition. (Based on a model depicted by Tsuang & others, 2001)

Summary of Schizophrenia Many biological factors seem involved –heredity –neurotransmitters –brain structure abnormalities Family and cultural factors also important Combined model of schizophrenia –biological predisposition combined with psychosocial stressors leads to disorder –Is schizophrenia the maladaptive coping behavior of a biologically vulnerable person?