Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Schizophrenia
- Types and
Symptoms
- Symptoms of
schizophrenia
- Positive symptoms
- Delusions
Anmerkungen:
- Delusions - Highly implausible thoughts that you believe are the activities of those who plot against you/use you
- Hallucinations
Anmerkungen:
- Hallucinations - Perceptions in any sensory modality without relevant and adequate external stimuli
- Negative symptoms
- Avolition
Anmerkungen:
- Patients lack energy and have no interest or ability to go through routine activities
- Alogia
Anmerkungen:
- Symptom where poverty of speech and poverty of content can be seen
- Anhedonia
Anmerkungen:
- An inability to experience pleasure
- Asociality
Anmerkungen:
- Having severe impairments in social relationships - few friends, poor social skills, and little interest in socializing
- Flat/Blunted Affect
Anmerkungen:
- No emotional can be elicited from a stimulus
- Disorganization
- Disorganized speech
Anmerkungen:
- Disorganized speech - Speech found in schizophrenics that is marked by problems in the organization of ideas and in speaking so that others can understand
- Other (Catatonic)
- Catatonia
Anmerkungen:
- Patients gesture repeatedly with no reason or sometimes just uncontrollably.
In catatonic immobility, patients stay in one position for a long time
- Waxy flexibility
Anmerkungen:
- Another person ca move the patients limbs and the patient remains that way for a long time
- Types
- Paranoid schizophrenia
Anmerkungen:
- - Characterized by positive symptoms
- Typically experience delusions of persecution or grandeur that are detailed and complex
- No disorganization or flat affect
- Disorganized schizophrenia
Anmerkungen:
- - Characterized by silly and incoherent behavior
- Disorganized speech (loose associations and derailment)
- Disorganized behavior (not goal-directed, neglecting appearance)
- Flat or inappropriate affect
- Catatonic schizophrenia
Anmerkungen:
- -Characterized by impairment of body movement
- Wild and uncontrolled movement
- Immobility or catalepsy (possibly 'waxy flexibility')
- Peculiar voluntary movement (bizarre postures or repeated gestures)
- Extreme negativism or mutilism
- Often echo speech of others
- Undifferentiated
Anmerkungen:
- - Characteristic symptoms of schizophrenia are present, but criteria are not met for any of the other sub types
- Residual
Anmerkungen:
- -Absence of positive symptoms ,symptoms of disorganized schizophrenia, or catatonic behavior
- Presence of negative symptoms or presence of other schizophrenia symptoms in lesser form
- Limitations of categorizing into types
Anmerkungen:
- - Lacks precision/reliability
- People don't fit neatly into one stubtype
- Categorizing people gives little or no indication of:
- Cause
- How it might develop
- Effective treatment
- Explanations
- Biological
- Biochemical
- Dopamine hypothesis
Anmerkungen:
- Dopamine hypothesis: the brains of schizophrenic patients are more sensitive to dopamine than the brains of non-schizophrenics
- Studies with drugs
Anmerkungen:
- - Amphetamines and cocaine increase the level of dopamine in the brain and produces schizophrenic (paranoid) symptoms
- When schizophrenics take amphetamines or cocaine, the symptoms worsen
- Chlorpromazine (anti-psychotic drug) can reduce symptoms by blocking D2 receptors, but can produce side effects similar to symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
- Parkinson's disease
Anmerkungen:
- - Parkinson's patients have low levels of dopamine
- L-dopa can raise dopamine activity
- But if too much L-dopa is taken, schizophrenic symptoms can be developed.
- Post mortem studies
Anmerkungen:
- - Autopsies show that schizophrenics have 6 times more the number of dopamine receptors than normal
- Excess of dopamine receptor sites is the same as having high levels of dopamine since the same message is sent too much in both
- PET scans
Anmerkungen:
- - Radioactive L-Dopa was tracked when absorbed by subject's brain.
- L-Dopa taken up quicker in schizophrenics
- Suggests that schizophrenics have more receptor sites or have hypersensitive receptors
- Genetic
- Gottesman & Shields
Anmerkungen:
- - Examined records of 57 schizophrenics with 40% being monozygotic and 60% being dizygotic.
- If pair was discordant, the non-schizophrenic was followed for 13 years
- MZ concordance rate was 42%
- DZ concordance rate was 9%
- Limitations
Anmerkungen:
- - Since MZ twins probably lived in similar conditions, environmental factors may have had a larger role
- MZ twins most likely had similar parenting hence the similarity
- Genetic link is shown, but it doesn't explain schizophrenia
- Cognitive
Anmerkungen:
- - Disturbed thinking processes are the cause of schizophrenia
- Physiological abnormalities lead to cognitive malfunctioning
- Hallucinations are the most dramatic perception distortions.
- They are mostly (74%) auditory
- Can be very frightening
- Cognitive malfunctionins
Anmerkungen:
- In a normal brain there is a mechanism that filters incoming stimuli.
A schizophrenic brain's mechanism malfunctions and lets in too much stimuli
- cannot focus
- unable to interpret information correctly
- world is very different
- Frith's study
Anmerkungen:
- -In schizophrenics, there is a disconnection between the pre-frontal cortex that control action and the posterior areas that control perception
-PET scans were done during cognitive test to trace radioactive glucose
-In schizophrenics, the prefrontal cortex showed low activation
-Schizophrenics performed poorly on the cognitive tests
- Frith's model of psychosis
Anmerkungen:
- Because of the disconnection, patients experience:
- Inability to generate willed action
- Inability to monitor willed action
- Inability to monitor the beliefs and intentions of others
- Limitations
Anmerkungen:
- - Cannot explain the cause of schizophrenia. The symptoms can be explained, but no cause is given
- Too deterministic. cognitive impairments = mental disorders
- Treatments
- Biological
- Antipsychotics
- Typical
Anmerkungen:
- - The first generation of antipsychotics developed in the 1950s
- Block dopamine receptors
- Positive symptoms are treated, but negative symptoms are not
- Many side effects
- 30% don't respond
- Atypical
Anmerkungen:
- - Newer generation of antipsychotics developed during the 1990s
- Atypicals attach to specific dopamine receptors
- Effective for positive symptoms and has some effect on negative symptoms
- Fewer side effects
- Electro Convulsive Therapy (ECT)
Anmerkungen:
- - Electric shocks are used to cause seizure where a 'rush' of chemical neurotransmitters is released and temporarily alters function.
- 3-4 times week for max. 12 treatments
- Sleep is induced
- Muscle relaxant used
- Only for catatonic symptoms and only when drug treatments have failed
- Side effects of temporary short term memory loss, confusion, paranoia, nausea, muscle aches and headache.
- Psychological
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Anmerkungen:
- Based on the idea that most unwanted thinking patterns, and emotional and behavioral reactions are learnt over a long period of time
- Restructures patient's perception to a more normal view
- Usually done alongside drug treatment
- Changes patient's faulty way of thinking
- Teaches patients recognize inapproproate affect and test delusional beliefs
-Treats symptoms and not the cause
- Behavioral Therapy
Anmerkungen:
- Based on operant conditioning (learning through reinforcement)
- Token Economies
Anmerkungen:
- - Helps people in psychiatric institutions to perform socially desirable behaviors
- Paul and Lentz
Anmerkungen:
- Paul and Lentz used token economies and behavior modification to reinforce socially acceptable behavior