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Chapter 13 Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
Amber Gilewski Tompkins Cortland Community College
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The “Positive” Symptom Cluster
The Positive Symptoms Active manifestations of abnormal behavior Distortions of normal behavior Delusions: The Basic Feature of Madness Gross misrepresentations of reality Include delusions of grandeur or persecution Hallucinations Experience of sensory events without environmental input Can involve all senses (auditory most common)
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The “Negative” Symptom Cluster
The Negative Symptoms Absence or insufficiency of normal behavior Spectrum of Negative Symptoms Avolition (or apathy) – Lack of initiation and persistence Alogia – Relative absence of speech Anhedonia – Lack of pleasure, or indifference Affective flattening – Little expressed emotion
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The “Disorganized” Symptom Cluster
The Disorganized Symptoms Severe and excess speech, behavior, and emotion Nature of Disorganized Speech Cognitive slippage – Illogical and incoherent speech Tangentiality – “Going off on a tangent” Loose associations – Conversation in unrelated directions • Inappropriate affect - Odd emotional behavior Disorganized Behavior Includes a variety of unusual behaviors
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Other Disorders with Psychotic Features: Schizophreniform Disorder
Schizophrenic symptoms for a few months Associated with good premorbid functioning Most resume normal lives Lifetime prevalence of 0.2%
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Other Disorders with Psychotic Features: Schizoaffective Disorder
Symptoms of schizophrenia and a mood disorder Both disorders are independent of one another Prognosis is similar for people with schizophrenia Such persons do not tend to get better on their own
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Other Disorders with Psychotic Features: Delusional Disorder
Delusions that are contrary to reality Lack other positive and negative symptoms Types of delusions include: Erotomanic: higher status figure love Grandiose: inflated importance Jealous: unwarranted beliefs of infidelity Persecutory: most common; conspired against Somatic: physical defects, disease, disorder Extremely rare Better prognosis than schizophrenia
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Additional Disorders with Psychotic Features: Brief Psychotic Disorder
One or more positive symptoms of schizophrenia Usually precipitated by extreme stress or trauma Tends to remit on its owns
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Schizophrenia: Some Facts and Statistics
Onset and Prevalence of Schizophrenia worldwide About 0.2% to 1.5% (1% population in US) Often develops in early adulthood Can emerge at any time Women have better prognosis Schizophrenia Is Generally Chronic Life expectancy is slightly less than average
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Developmental Research
Brain damage – during prenatal or infancy periods may be a cause of schizophrenia Early brain abnormality – may have better prognosis due to brain’s plasticity (ability to compensate) Older adult’s symptoms – demonstrate that the illness may improve over time Levels of impairment – fluctuates between moderate and severe; relapse is common
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Causes of Schizophrenia: Findings From Genetic Research
Family Studies Inherit a tendency for schizophrenia, not forms of schizophrenia Risk increases with genetic relatedness Twin Studies - Monozygotic twins – Risk for schizophrenia is 48% - Fraternal (dizygotic) twins – Risk drops to 17% Adoption Studies -- Risk for schizophrenia remains high
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Causes of Schizophrenia: Neurotransmitter Influences
The Dopamine Hypothesis Drugs that increase dopamine (agonists) Result in schizophrenic-like behavior Drugs that decrease dopamine (antagonists) Reduce schizophrenic-like behavior Neurological damage? -Structural and Functional Abnormalities in the Brain Enlarged ventricles and reduced tissue volume
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Location of the cerebrospinal fluid in the human brain
Fig. 13.7, p. 486
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Causes of Schizophrenia: Psychological and Social Influences
The Role of Stress May activate underlying vulnerability May also increase risk of relapse Family Interactions Families – Show ineffective communication patterns High expressed emotion – associated with relapse
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Medical Treatment of Schizophrenia
Historical Treatment primitive brain surgeries in 1500s prefrontal lobotomies used in 1950’s modern treatment using neuroleptic drugs
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Biological Interventions
The 1930’s Insulin coma therapy: insulin induced hypoglycemia resulting in convulsions & coma Psychosurgery: disconnecting frontal lobes ECT: aka “shock therapy”; not beneficial The 1950’s: development of antipsychotic (neuroleptic) medications Often the first line treatment for schizophrenia Newer medications have fewer serious side effects
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Medical Treatment of Schizophrenia (continued)
Compliance with medication is often a problem (medical relationship, cost, poor supports, side effects) Acute and permanent side effects are common Akinesia: absence, loss, or impairment of the power of voluntary movement Tardive dyskinesia: twitching of the face, trunk, or limbs
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Psychosocial Treatment of Schizophrenia
Behavioral (i.e., token economies) on inpatient units Community care programs: outpatient; reducing institutionalization Social and living skills training: teaching appropriate behaviors Independent living skills: encouraged in community care programs Behavioral family therapy: helping families to be more supportive Vocational rehabilitation: aiding in job skills and employment
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NAME THAT SYMPTOM! Disorder of thought content or delusion
Delusion of grandeur Delusion of persecution Auditory hallucination Visual hallucination Olfactory hallucination Tactile hallucination Tangentiality Loose association Waxy flexibility & catatonic immobility Echopraxia Echolalia Alogia Disorganized behavior
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