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Published byJoanna Banks Modified over 9 years ago
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Schizophrenia Onset can be slow or sudden Typically exists chronically Affects ~1% of population Diagnosis must have at least two symptoms for more that 1 month
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Schizophrenia Symptoms Positive Symptoms (abnormal states) hallucinations (auditory, visual) delusions (grandeur, persecution) Negative Symptoms (insufficient functioning) avolition (inability to initiate/persist in activities) alogia (absence of speech) anhedonia (inability to experience pleasure) affective flattening (flat emotional response) Disorganized Symptoms inappropriate affect (laughing/crying at the wrong times) disorganized speech (illogical, rambling, tangential) disorganized behavior (catatonia, agitation/immobility)
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Schizophrenia Subtypes Paranoid Type hallucinations delusions Catatonic Type unusual motor responses remaining in a fixed position excessive activity or rigidity echoing words or movements of others Disorganized Type speech problems behavior problems flat or inappropriate affect
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Schizophrenia and Gender
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Schizophreni Genetic Risk by Relatedness The Evidence: Family History Twin Studies monozygotic (50%) same handed (92%) dizygotic (15%) both are carriers Adopted Children more like bioparents Single Gene? Probably not
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Brain Structure Abnormalities Increased Lateral Ventricles
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Brain Structure Abnormalities Reduced Hippocampus and Amygdala Normal Affected
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Brain Structure Abnormalities Hippocampal Pyramidal Cell Disorganization
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Brain Structure Abnormalities Atypical Frontal Lobe Functioning Evidence: smaller forebrain smaller cerebral cortex smaller dorsolateral prefrontal cortex fewer cortical neurons smaller cortical neurons abnormal neuronal development neurons remain in white matter fail to arrange in neat order abnormal CAMs less metabolic activity hypofrontality failure to increase activity following task abnormal EEGs
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Neurobehavioral Hypothesis Maternal/Fetal Evidence: extensive maternal bleeding prolonged labor delivery complications low birth weight low head circumference body length:body weight multiparity Anectodal Evidence Dutch births during WWII Season of birth effect higher for winter pregnancies parallel with virus exposure
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Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia Abnormal levels of Dopamine lead to the schizophrenic symptoms 1. Amphetamine Psychosis Chronic users develop schizophrenic symptoms paranoia, delusions of persecution, auditory hallucinations Amphetamine exacerbates schizophrenic symptoms Amphetamines promote the release of catelcholamines particularly dopamine 2. Antipsychotic Drugs chlorapromazine is a dopamine antagonist and antipsychotic block specifically D2 and D4 receptors in the limbic system effectiveness is related to magnitude of blockade 3. Parkinson’s Disease some patients receiving L-dopa become psychotic some schizophrenic patients on antipsychotics develop Parkinson’s symptoms
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