|
|||||
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
Lesson
39
SCHIZOPHRENIA
1-
What is Schizophrenia?
·
Schizophrenia
is a disorder that includes changes in
the way a person thinks,
feels, and
relates
to other people and the outside
environment.
·
It is a
disorder in which previously adaptive
levels of social, personal,
and occupational
functioning
deteriorate.
·
No
single symptom or specific
set of symptoms is characteristic of
all schizophrenic
patients.
2-
Is Schizophrenia a disease like
diabetes?
·
It is a
disease like
diabetes.
·
Where
the whole life pattern is
modified.
·
Schizophrenia
is a devastating disorder for both the
patients and their
families.
3-
Or some overwhelming stress that
leads to Schizophrenia?
·
Psychological
stressors contribute to
Schizophrenia.
4-
Do Schizophrenic people Perceive and
experience reality
differently?
·
Yes
Schizophrenic people Perceive and
experience reality differently.
5-
Can Schizophrenics be cured?
The
treatment includes
·
Medication
·
Psychotherapy
·
Rehabilitation
6-
Why we study Schizophrenia?
·
Schizophrenia
has an enormous impact on
society. Among mental
disorders, it is the second
leading
cause of disease burden.
The
problems of most patients
can be divided into three
phases of variable and unpredictable
duration:
prodromal,
active, and residual.
i)
The
prodromal
phase precedes
the active phase and is
marked by an obvious deterioration
in
role
functioning as a student, employee, or
homemaker.
Prodromal
signs and symptoms are
similar to those associated
with schizotypal personality
disorder.
They include peculiar behaviors
(such as talking to one's
self in public), unusual
perceptual
experiences, outbursts of anger,
increased tension, and
restlessness.
ii)
Social
withdrawal, indecisiveness, and lack of
willpower are often seen
during the prodromal
phase.
Symptoms such as hallucinations,
delusions, and disorganized
speech are characteristic
of
the
active
phase of the
disorder.
iii)
The
residual
phase follows
the active phase of the disorder and is
defined by signs and
symptoms
that are similar in many
respects to those seen
during the prodromal phase.
The
symptoms
of schizophrenia can be divided
into three dimensions:
positive symptoms,
negative
symptoms,
and disorganization.
a)
Positive Symptoms
·
Positive
symptoms, also called
psychotic
symptoms. Positive
symptoms are characterized by
the
presence
of a response (such as hearing a voice
that is not really
there).
·
Hallucinations
are sensory experiences that
are not caused by actual
external stimuli.
193
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
·
Although
hallucinations can occur in any of the
senses, those experienced by
schizophrenic
patients
are most often
auditory.
·
Hallucinations
strike the person as being real, in spite
of the fact that they have no basis
in
reality.
They are also persistent
over time. Many schizophrenic
patients express delusions,
or
false
beliefs that are rigidly
held. Delusions have sometimes
been defined as false
beliefs based
on
incorrect inferences about reality. In
the most obvious cases,
delusional patients express
and
defend
their beliefs with utmost
conviction, even when presented
with contradictory
evidence.
b)
Negative Symptoms
·
In
contrast, negative
symptoms involve
deficits in normal behavior in the areas of
speech
emotion
and motivation, such as lack
of initiative, social withdrawal.
·
Blunted
affect, or
affective
flattening,
involves a
flattening or restriction of the person's
nonverbal
display of emotional responses.
Another type of emotional deficit is
called
anhedonia,
which refers to the inability to
experience pleasure.
·
A
person who suffers from
avolition
becomes
apathetic and ceases to work
toward personal
goals
or to function independently. Another
negative symptom involves a form of
speech
disturbance
called alogia. In
one form of alogia, known as
poverty
of speech, patients
show
remarkable
reductions in the amount of
speech.
·
In another
form, referred to as thought
blocking, the patient's
train of speech is interrupted
before
a
thought or idea has been
completed.
c)
Disorganization
·
Verbal
communication problems and bizarre
behavior represent this third dimension,
which is
sometimes
called disorganization. Common features of
disorganized speech in
schizophrenia
include
shifting topics too
abruptly, called loose
associations or derailment;
replying
to a
question
with an irrelevant response, called
tangentiality;
or
persistently repeating the
same
word
or phrase over and over
again, called
perseveration.
DSM-IV-TR
lists several specific criteria
for schizophrenia. The first
requirement (Criterion A) is
that
the patient must exhibit two
(or more) active symptoms
for at least 1 month. The
DSM-IV-TR
definition
also takes into account
social and occupational functioning as
well as the duration of the
disorder
(Criteria B and C). The
DSM-IV-TR definition requires
evidence of a decline in the
person's
social or occupational functioning as
well as the presence of disturbed
behavior over a
continuous
period of at least 6
months.
The
final consideration in arriving at a
diagnosis of schizophrenia involves the
exclusion of related
conditions,
especially mood disorders.
DSM-IV-TR recognizes five
subtypes of schizophrenia.
i)
The
catatonic
type is
characterized by symptoms of motor
immobility (including rigidity
and
posturing)
or excessive and purposeless
motor activity.
ii)
The
disorganized
type of
schizophrenia is characterized by
disorganized speech,
disorganized
behavior, and flat or
inappropriate affect.
iii)
The
most prominent symptoms in the
paranoid
type are
systematic delusions with
persecutory
or
grandiose content.
iv)
The
undifferentiated
type of
schizophrenia includes schizophrenic
patients who display
prominent
psychotic symptoms and either
meet the criteria for several
subtypes or otherwise do
not
meet the criteria for the catatonic,
disorganized, or paranoid types.
·
The
most prominent symptoms in the paranoid
type are systematic delusions
with persecutory
or
grandiose content.
·
The
undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
includes schizophrenic patients
who display
prominent
psychotic symptoms and either
meet the criteria for several
subtypes or otherwise
do
not meet the criteria for the
catatonic, disorganized, or paranoid
types.
194
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
v)
The
residual
type includes
patients who no longer meet the criteria
for active phase
symptoms
but nevertheless demonstrate
continued signs of negative
symptoms or forms of
delusions,
hallucinations, or disorganized
speech.
·
They
are in "partial remission."
Related
Psychotic Disorders
·
Schizoaffective
disorder is defined by an episode in
which the symptoms of
schizophrenia
partially
overlap with a major depressive episode
or a manic episode. People
with delusional
disorder
do not meet full symptomatic
criteria for schizophrenia, but they
are preoccupied for
at
least 1 month with delusions
that are not
bizarre.
·
Brief
psychotic disorder is a category that
includes those people who
exhibit psychotic
symptoms--delusions,
hallucinations, disorganized speech, or
grossly disorganized or
catatonic
behavior--for
at least 1 day but no more
than 1 month. Schizophrenia is a
severe, progressive
disorder
that most often begins in
adolescence and typically
has a poor outcome.
Follow-up
studies
of schizophrenic patients have
found that the description of outcome
can be a
complicated
process. Many factors must
be taken into consideration other
than whether the
person
is still in the hospital.
·
One of the
most informative ways of examining the
frequency of schizophrenia is to
consider
the
lifetime
morbidity risk--that
is, the proportion of a specific
population that will be
affected by
the
disorder at some time during their
lives.
·
Most
studies in Europe and the
United States have reported
lifetime morbid risk figures
of
approximately
1 percent.
Gender
Differences
Most
epidemiological studies have reported
that across the life span
men and women are
equally
likely
to be affected by schizophrenia.
Cross-Cultural
Comparisons
Schizophrenia
has been observed virtually
in every culture that has
been subjected to
careful
scrutiny.
Two large-scale epidemiological studies,
conducted by teams of scientists
working for the
World
Health Organization (WHO), indicate that
the incidence of schizophrenia is
relatively
constant
across different cultural
settings.
Causes
of Schizophrenia
An
interaction of sociological, biological,
and psychological factors
seem to contribute to
schizophrenia.
1-
Socio-cultural Factors
The
socio-cultural view is based on the
principle that society has
certain expectations in regard
to
the
behavior of a person who is
labeled as schizophrenic, and
that these expectations may
promote
the
development of symptoms.
2-
Biological Factors
·
The
family history data twin
and adoption studies are
consistent with the hypothesis
that
transmission
of schizophrenia is influenced by genetic
factors.
·
One of the
most exciting areas of research on
genetics and schizophrenia
focuses on the search
for
genetic linkage. Studies of this type
are designed to identify the
location of a specific
gene
that
is responsible for the disorder (or
some important component of the
disorder).
·
Linkage
analysis has not been
able to identify a specific
gene for
schizophrenia, but it
has
implicated
regions
on a
small number of chromosomes that
may contribute to the etiology of
the
disorder.
·
For
example, reports of positive linkage on
regions of chromosomes 6, 8, 13,
and 22 have been
verified
by more than one
laboratory.
195
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
3-
Pregnancy and Birth
Complications
·
People
with schizophrenia are more
likely than the general
population to have been
exposed to
various
problems during their mother's
pregnancy and to have suffered
birth injuries. Problems
during
pregnancy include the mother's contracting various
types of diseases and
infections.
·
Birth
complications include extended labor,
breech delivery, forceps
delivery, and the
umbilical
cord
wrapped around the baby's
neck.
4-
Viral Infections
·
Some
speculation has focused on the
potential role that viral
infections may play in the
etiology
of
schizophrenia.
·
One
indirect line of support for this
hypothesis comes from
studies indicating that people
who
develop
schizophrenia are somewhat
more likely than other
people to have been born
during
the
winter months. Exposure to infection
presumably interferes with
brain development in the
fetus.
Research support for the hypothesis
remains inconsistent.
5-
Neuropathology
·
Many
investigations of brain structure in people
with schizophrenia have employed
magnetic
resonance
imaging (MRI).
·
Schizophrenia
seems to affect many different
regions of the brain and the
ways in which they
connect
or communicate with each
other.
·
Most
MRI studies have reported a decrease in
total volume of brain tissue
among
schizophrenic
patients.
·
The
most consistent findings
point toward structural as
well as functional irregularities in
the
frontal
cortex and limbic areas of the temporal
lobes, which play an important
role in cognitive
and
emotional processes.
6-
Neurochemistry
Scientists
have proposed various
neurochemical theories to account
for the etiology of
schizophrenia.
The most influential theory,
known as the dopamine
hypothesis, focuses
on the function
of
specific dopamine pathways in the limbic
area of the brain. Several studies
have found decreased
serotonin
receptor density in cortical areas of
schizophrenic patients. Brain
imaging studies that
point
to problems in the prefrontal cortex have
also drawn attention to glutamate
and GABA
(gammaaminobutyric
acid), the two principal
neurotransmitters in the cerebral
cortex.
7-
Social Factors
The
evidence supporting an inverse
relationship between social class
and schizophrenia is
substantial.
Adverse social and economic
circumstances may increase the
probability that
persons
who
are genetically predisposed to the
disorder will develop its clinical
symptoms.
Treatment
1-Antipsychotic
Medication
·
Antipsychotic
drugs reduce the severity
and sometimes eliminate psychotic
symptoms. Classical
antipsychotics
are also known as neuroleptic
drugs
because they also induce
side effects that
resemble
the motor symptoms of Parkinson's
disease. In the case of antipsychotic
drugs, the
most
obvious and troublesome side
effects are called extrapyramidal
symptoms (EPS)
which
include
neurological disturbances, such as
muscular rigidity, tremors,
restless agitation, peculiar
involuntary
postures, and motor
inertia.
·
Atypical
antipsychotics also produce
side effects, such as weight
gain and obesity.
·
All
antipsychotic medications--both traditional
and atypical forms--act by
blocking dopamine
receptors
in the cortical and limbic areas of the
brain.
·
They
also affect a number of other
neurotransmitters, including serotonin
and acetylcholine.
196
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
2-Psychosocial
Treatment
·
Family
treatment programs attempt to improve the coping
skills of family
members,
recognizing
the burdens that people often
endure while caring for a
family member with a
chronic
mental disorder. There are several
different approaches to this type of
family
intervention.
Most include an educational component
that is designed to help
family members
understand
and accept the nature of the
disorder.
i-
Social skills
training (SST)
is a
structured, educational approach
that involves
modeling,
role playing, and the provision of
social reinforcement for appropriate
behaviors.
ii-
Assertive
community treatment (ACT) is a
psychosocial intervention that is
delivered by
an
interdisciplinary team of
clinicians.
·
They
provide a combination of psychological
treatments--including education, support,
skills
training,
and rehabilitation--as well as
medication.
·
Some
patients are chronically disturbed and
require long-term institutional treatment
Social
learning
programs, sometimes called
token
economies, can be
useful for these patients.
In these
programs
specific behavioral contingencies are
put into place for
all of the patients on a
hospital
ward. The goal is to
increase the frequency of desired
behaviors, such as appropriate
grooming
and participation in social
activities, and to decrease the
frequency of undesirable
behaviors,
such as violence or incoherent
speech.
·
Carefully
structured inpatient programs,
especially those that follow
behavioral principles, can
have
important positive effects
for chronic schizophrenic patients,
Fountain house.
197
Table of Contents:
|
|||||