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Psychosis
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The capacity to perceive, process, and respond to environmental stimuli is impaired Three mental disorders involve psychosis: –Mood Disorders –The Schizophrenias –Delusional Disorder (Paranoia)
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Schizophrenia The origin of the concept: –Dementia Praecox (Morel, Kraepelin) –Schizophrenia (Bleuler)
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“The integrating mental picture in my personality was taken away and smashed to bits, leaving me like agitated hamburger distributed infinitely throughout the universe” »Quoted by Mendel
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Clinical Presentation Positive Symptoms: –Something has been added to normal behaviour e.g. marked emotional turmoil, motor agitation, delusions and hallucinations Negative Symptoms: –Something has been taken away from normal behaviour e.g. emotional expressiveness, communicative speech, and reactivity
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Clinical Presentation Type I schizophrenia: –Characterized by positive symptoms and tends to respond to medication Type II schizophrenia: –Characterized by negative symptoms, associated with structural brain abnormalities, and does not respond as well to medication
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Clinical Presentation Disorganized: –Characterized by chaotic and seemingly directionless speech and behaviour Non-disorganized: –Less disorganization
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Disturbance of Associative Linking Formal Thought Disorder Cognitive slippage, derailment, loosening of associations, or incoherence Blocking Neologisms/clanging/word salad
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“My thoughts get all jumbled up. I start thinking or talking about something but I never get there. Instead I wander off in the wrong direction and get caught up with all sorts of different things that may be connected with the things I want to say but in a way I can’t explain. People listening to me get more lost than I do.”
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Disturbance of Thought Content Delusions Common Delusions: –Persecution –Control (influence) –Reference –Grandeur –Sin and Guilt –Hypochondriacal –Nihilistic
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Disruption of Perception Unable to sort out and process sensory information Breakdown of selective attention Hallucinations
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“Schizophrenic behaviour is a special strategy that a person invents in order to live in an unlivable situation.” »R. D. Lang
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Emotional Dysfunction Inappropriate emotion Anhedonia, blunting expression – appears to be a deficit of expressiveness rather than experience
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Confused Sense of Self Delusional identity Delusional boundaries between self and not self Delusions regarding agency
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Disrupted Volition Disrupted goal-directed activity Deterioration from previous daily functioning Frontal lobes and executive functioning
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Retreat to an Inner World Disengagement from the external world In extreme cases can be seen as a deliberate attempt to avoid being overwhelmed Rich elaboration of inner world (fantastic ideas, creation of strange beings)
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Disturbed Motor Behaviour Excited hyperactivity Marked clumsiness Decrease in movement
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Classifying Schizophrenia
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Subtypes of Schizophrenia Catatonic Type Disorganized Type Paranoid Type Residual Type Undifferentiated Type
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Catatonic Type Pronounced motor signs, either excited or slowed The slowed state can often look like a psychotic mood disorder Echolalia, Echopraxia Maintain postures May swing from hyperactivity to low activity (stupor)
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Disorganized Type Usually occurs at an earlier stage More severe personality disintegration Hebephrenic Preoccupation with trivial, moral, philosophical issues Emotional distortion, bizarre, inappropriate expression Incoherent speech
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Paranoid Type History of increasing suspiciousness and severe interpersonal difficulties Absurd, illogical, and often changing delusions – typically themes of persecution and grandeur Higher level of adaptive functioning
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