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SCHIZOPHRENIA

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Title: SCHIZOPHRENIA


1
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • a chronic, debilitating mental disorder
    characterized by periods of loss of touch with
    reality (psychosis), however 7-15 have only one
    episode and full remission
  • usually involves repeated psychotic episodes and
    a chronic, downhill course over years
  • persistent disturbances of thought, behavior,
    appearance, and speech
  • abnormal affect
  • social withdrawal.
  • often stabilizes in midlife.

General characteristics
2
SCHIZOPHRENIA
General characteristics
3
SYMPTOMS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Positive - things additional to expected behavior
    and include delusions, hallucinations, agitation,
    and talkativeness.
  • Negative - things missing from expected behavior
    and include lack of motivation, social
    withdrawal, flattened affect, cognitive
    disturbances, poor grooming, and poor (i.e.,
    impoverished) speech content.

General characteristics
4
PSYCHOSIS
  • Is associated with abnormal functioning of
    frontal systems, temporal lobes, and dopaminergic
    projections to this areas.
  • All individuals are at risk for its developing.
    Contributing factors include
  • genetic predispositions
  • environmental factors
  • damage sustained through trauma, disease,
    substance abuse
  • effects of experience on neuronal structures and
    neurochemical release
  • neuronal and biochemical changes during normal
    human development
  • Psychosis will develop when a threshold of damage
    or changes to frontal system, temporal structures
    and dopaminergic projections is attained

Framework for developing psychosis (Fujii, Ahmed,
2002)
5
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • A. Two (or more) of the following symptoms, each
    present for a significant portion of time during
    a 1-month period (or less if successfully
    treated)
  • 1. Delusions
  • 2. Hallucinations
  • 3. Disorganized speech (e.g., frequent derailment
    or incoherence)
  • 4. Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior
  • 5. Negative symptoms, i.e., affective flattening,
    alogia, or avolition
  • Note Only one Criterion A symptom is required if
    delusions arce bizzare or hallucinations consist
    of a voice keeping up a running commentary on the
    person's behavior or thoughts, or two or more
    voices conversing with each other.

DSM-IV
6
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • C. Duration Continuous signs of the disturbance
    persist for at least 6 months. This 6-month
    period most include at least 1 months of symptoms
    (or less if successfully treated) that meet
    Criterion A (i.e., active-phase symptoms) and may
    include periods of prodromal or residual
    symptoms.
  • During these prodromal or residual periods, the
    signs of the disturbance may he manifested by
    only negative symptoms or two or more symptoms
    listed in Criterion A present in an attenuated
    form (e.g., odd beliefs, unusual perceptual
    experiences).
  • D. Schizoaffective and Mood Disorder exclusion

DSM-IV
7
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • E. Substance/general medical condition exclusion
    The disturbance is not due to the direct
    physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a
    drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical
    condition.
  • F. Relationship to a Pervasive Developmental
    Disorder. If there is a history of Autistic
    Disorder or another Pervasive Developmental
    Disorder, the additional diagnosis of
    Schizophrenia is made only if prominent delusion,
    or hallucinations are also present for at least a
    month (or less if successfully treated).

DSM-IV
8
COURSE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • These specifiers can he applied only after at
    least 1 year has elapsed since the initial onset
    of active-phase symptoms
  • Episodic With Interepisode Residual Symptoms.
  • Episodic With No Interepisode Residual Symptoms
  • Continuous
  • Single Episode In Partial Remission
  • Single Episode In Full Remission
  • Other or Unspecified Pattern

classification
9
STAGES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA (Fenton, McGlashan, 2000)
  • 1. Prodromal
  • 2. Acute (active)
  • 3. Subacute, stabilization
  • 4. Moratorium or adaptative plateau
  • 5. Changes points with the possibily of
    improvement or decompensation
  • 6. Final stage or stable plateau

classification
10
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Epidemiology
  • Schizophrenia 1
  • Schizoaffective disorder - 0.5-0.8


  • Delusional disorder 0.025 0.03

General information
11
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Etiology is not known, certain factors have been
    implicated in its development.
  • Occurs in 1 of the population. Persons with a
    close genetic relationship to a patient with
    schizophrenia are more likely than those with a
    more distant relationship to develop the
    disorder.
  • Markers on chromosomes 5, 11, 18, 19 and 22 and,
    most recently, 6, 8, and 13 have been associated
    with schizophrenia.

General characteristics
12
SCHIZOPHRENIA
genetics
13
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Neural pathology
  • 1. Anatomy
  • a. Abnormalities of the frontal lobes, as
    evidenced by decreased use of glucose in the
    frontal lobes on positron emission tomography
    (PET') scans are seen in the brains of people
    with schizophrenia.
  • b. Lateral and third ventricle enlargement,
    abnormal cerebral symmetry, and changes in brain
    density also may be present.
  • c. Decreased volume of limbic structures (e.g.,
    amygdala, hippocampus) is also seen.

General characteristics
14
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Neural pathology
  • 2. Neurotransmitter abnormalities
  • The dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia states
    that schizophrenia results from excessive
    dopaminergic activity (e.g., excessive number of
    dopamine receptors, excessive concentration of
    dopamine, hypersensitivity of receptors to
    dopamine). As evidence for this hypothesis,
    stimulant drugs that increase dopamine
    availability (e.g., amphetamines and cocaine) can
    cause psychotic symptoms.
  • Laboratory tests may show elevated levels
    of homovanillic acid (HVA), a metabolite of
    dopamine, in the body fluids of patients with
    schizophrenia.
  • b. Serotonin hyperactivity is implicated in
    schizophrenia because hallucinogens that increase
    serotonin concentrations cause psychotic symptoms
    and because some effective antipsychotics, such
    as clozapin, have anti-serotonergic-2 (5-HT2)
    activity.
  • c. Glutamate is implicated in schizophrenia
    because antagonists of the N-methyl-D-aspartate
    (NMDA) subtype of glutamate receptors (e.g.,
    phencyclidine) increase and agonists of NMDA
    receptors alleviate psychotic symptoms.

General characteristic
15
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • The season of birth is related to the incidence
    of schizophrenia. More people with schizophrenia
    are born during cold weather months (i.e.,
    January - April in the northern hemisphere and
    July - September in the southern hemisphere). One
    possible explanation for this finding is viral
    infection of the mother during pregnancy, since
    such infections occur seasonally.

General information
16
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • No social or environmental factor causes
    schizophrenia.
  • However, because patients with schizophrenia
    tend to drift down the socioeconomic scale as a
    result of their social deficits (the "downward
    drift" hypothesis), they are often found in lower
    socioeconomic groups (e.g., homeless people).

General information
17
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Premorbid features - 25-50
  • decreased social adjustment and school
    achievements
  • decrease emotional reactivity
  • social withdrawal
  • introversion
  • suspiciousness
  • impulsive behavior
  • abnormal reactions to usual events and situations
  • problems with focusing attention for the longer
    time
  • delays in the psychomotoric development
  • problems with sensorimotoric and motoric
    coordination

course
18
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Onset of illness
  • 50 prodromal syndromes worse prognosis than
    those with acute, sudden onset
  • The course
  • 55 - rather good,
  • 45 - rather unfavorable, including 5 with
    definitely unfavorable (15 in the past)
  • antipsychotic medications improve the course
    (decreases symptoms) and reduces relapse rate
    (40- 50 of reduction).

course
19
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Social Functioning
  • GAF gt59 (minimal, mild or no difficulty in social
    functioning 38
  • Additionally no flare-up requiring treatment
    within two years 38
  • Polish data (based on 6000 patients)
  • Working in the natural conditions 12.4
  • Working in protected conditions 4.1
  • Students 6.9
  • High school 1.3

course
20
SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Suicide is common in patients with schizophrenia.
    More than 50"/o attempt suicide (often during
    post-psychotic depression or when having
    hallucinations "commanding" them to harm
    themselves), and 10 of those die in the attempt.
  • The prognosis is better and the suicide risk is
    lower if the patient is older at onset of
    illness, is married, has social relationships, is
    female, has a good employment history, has mood
    symptoms, has few negative symptoms, and has few
    relapses.
  • The better course in developing countries

course
21
SCHIZOPHRENIA
types
22
SCHIZOPHRENIA SUBTYPES
  • Paranoid Type
  • A. Preoccupation with one or more delusions or
    frequent auditory hallucinations.
  • B. None of the following is prominent
    disorganized speech, disorganized or catatonic
    behavior, or flat or inappropriate affect.

DSM-IV
23
SCHIZOPHRENIA SUBTYPES
  • Disorganized Type
  • A. All of the following are prominent
  • (1) disorganized speech
  • (2) disorganized behavior
  • (3) flat or inappropriate affect
  • B. The criteria are not met for Catatonic Type

DSM-IV
24
SCHIZOPHRENIA SUBTYPES
  • Catatonic Type
  • The clinical picture is dominated by at least two
    of the following
  • (1) motoric immobility as evidenced by catalepsy
    (including waxy flexibility) or stupor
  • (2) excessive motor activity (that is apparently
    purposeless and not influenced by external
    stimuli)
  • (3) extreme negativism (an apparently motiveless
    resistance to all instructions or maintenance of
    a rigid posture against attempts to be moved) or
    mutism
  • (4) peculiarities of voluntary movement as
    evidenced by posturing (voluntary assumption of
    inappropriate or bizarre postures), stereotyped
    movements, prominent mannerisms, or prominent
    grimacing
  • (5) echolalia or echopraxia

DSM-IV
25
SCHIZOPHRENIA SUBTYPES
  • Undifferentiated Type
  • A type in which symptoms that meet Criterion A
    are present, but the criteria are not met for the
    paranoid, disorganized, or catatonic type.

DSM-IV
26
SCHIZOPHRENIA SUBTYPES
  • Residual Type
  • A. Absence of prominent delusions,
    hallucinations, disorganized speech, and grossly
    disorganized or catatonic behavior.
  • B. There is continuing evidence of the
    disturbance, as indicated by the presence of
    negative symptoms or two or more symptoms listed
    in Criterion A for schizophrenia, present in an
    attenuated form (e.g., odd beliefs, unusual
    perceptual experiences).

DSM-IV
27
SCHIZOPHRENIA DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Medical illnesses that can cause psychotic
    symptoms, and thus mimic schizophrenia (i.e.,
    psychotic disorder caused by a general medical
    condition), include neurological infection,
    neoplasm, trauma, disease (e.g., Huntington
    disease, multiple sclerosis), temporal lobe
    epilepsy, and endocrine disorders (e.g., Cushing
    syndrome, acute intermittent porphyria).

DSM-IV
28
SCHIZOPHRENIA DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Medications that can cause psychotic symptoms
    include analgesics, antibiotics,
    anticholinergics, antihistamines,
    antineoplastics, cardiac glycosides (e.g.,
    digitalis), and steroid hormones.

DSM-IV
29
SCHIZOPHRENIA DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • A.Other psychotic disorders - characterized at
    some point during their course by a loss of touch
    with reality. However, the other psychotic
    disorders do not include all of the criteria
    required for the diagnosis of schizophrenia
  • brief psychotic disorder
  • schizophreniform disorder
  • delusional disorder
  • shared psychotic disorder
  • B. Mood disorders (e.g., the manic phase of
    bipolar disorder, major depression).
  • C. Cognitive disorders (e.g., delirium, dementia,
    and amnestic disorder)
  • D. Substance-related disorders
  • E. Schizotypal, paranoid and borderline
    personality disorders are not characterized by
    frank psychotic symptoms but have other
    characteristics of schizophrenia, (e.g., odd
    behavior, avoidance of social relationships).

DSM-IV
30
SCHIZOPHRENIA TREATMENT
  • Pharmacologic
  • traditional antipsychotics dopamine2
    (D2)-receptor antagonists first generation of
    antipsychotic medication
  • atypical antipsychotic agents second generation
    of antipsychotic medication
  • Because of their better side-effect profiles, the
    atypical agents are now first-line treatments.

DSM-IV
31
SCHIZOPHRENIA TREATMENT
  • Psychosocial treatments
  • Psychotherapy individual, family, and group
  • Psychoeducation with activity of patients or
    enhancing motivation to the treatment
  • Social support

DSM-IV
32
SCHIZOPHRENIA-LIKE DISORDERS
SYMPTOMS
33
SCHIZOPHRENIFORM DISORDER
  • Criteria A, D, and E of schizophrenia are met
  • An episode of the disorder (including prodromal,
    active, and residual phases) lasted at least 1
    month but less than 6 months (when the diagnosis
    must be made without waiting for recovery, it
    should be qualified as provisional).
  • Specify if
  • Without good prognostic features
  • With good prognostic features if evidenced by two
    or more of the following

DSM-IV
34
SCHIZOPHRENIFORM DISORDER
  • With good prognostic features if evidenced by two
    or more of the following
  • onset of prominent psychotic symptoms within 4
    weeks of the first noticeable change in usual
    behavior or functioning
  • confusion or perplexity at he height of psychotic
    episode
  • good premorbid social functioning
  • absence of blunted or flat affect

DSM-IV
35
SCHIZOAFFECTIVE DISORDER
  • A. An interrupted period of illness during which,
    at some time, there is either a Major Depressive
    Episode, a Manic Episode, or a Mixed Episode
    concurrent with symptoms that meet Criterion A
    for schizophrenia.
  • B. During the same period of illness, there have
    been delusions or hallucinations for at least 2
    weeks in the absence of prominent mood symptoms.
  • C. Symptoms that meet criteria for a mood episode
    are present for a substantial portion of the
    total duration of the active and residual periods
    of the illness.
  • D. The disturbance is not due to the direct
    physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a
    drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical
    condition.

DSM-IV
36
SCHIZOAFFECTIVE DISORDER
  • Specify type
  • Bipolar Type if the disturbance includes a Manic
    or a Mixed Episode (or a Manic or a Mixed and
    Major Depressive Episodes)
  • Depressive Type if the disturbance only includes
    Major Depressive Episodes

DSM-IV
37
DELUSIONAL DISORDER (PARANOIA)
  • A. Nonbizarre delusions (i.e., involving
    situations that occur in real life, such as being
    followed, poisoned, infected, loved at a
    distance, or deceived by spouse or lover, or
    having a disease) of at least 1 months duration.
  • B. Criterion A for Schizophrenia has never been
    met. Note Tactile and olfactory hallucinations
    may he present in Delusional Disorder if they
    are related to the delusional theme.
  • C. Apart from the impact of the delusion(s) its
    ramifications, functioning is not markedly
    impaired and behavior is not obviously odd or
    bizarre.
  • D. If mood episodes have occurred concurrently
    with delusions, their total duration has been
    brief relative to the duration of the delusional
    periods.
  • E. The disturbance is not due to the direct
    physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a
    drag of abuse, a medication) or a general
    medical condition.

DSM-IV
38
DELUSIONAL DISORDER (PARANOIA)
  • Specify type (the following types are assigned
    based on the predominant delusional theme)
  • Erotomanic delusions that another person,
    usually of higher status, is in love with the
    individual
  • Grandiose delusions of inflated worth, power,
    knowledge, identity, or special relationship to a
    deity or famous person
  • Jealous delusions that the individual's sexual
    partner is unfaithful
  • Persecutory delusions that the person (or
    someone to whom the person is close) is being
    malevolently treated in some way
  • Somatic delusions that the person has some
    physical defect or general medical condition
  • Mixed Type delusions characteristic of more than
    one of the above types but no one theme
    predominates
  • Unspecified Type

DSM-IV
39
BRIEF PSYCHOTIC DISORDER
  • A. Presence of one (or more) of the following
    symptoms
  • (1) delusions
  • (2) hallucinations
  • (3) disorganized speech (e.g., frequent
    derailment or incoherence)
  • (4) grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior
  • Note Do not include a symptom if it is a
    culturally sanctioned response pattern.
  • B. Duration of an episode of the disturbance is
    at least 1 day but less than 1 month, with
    eventual full return to premorbid level of
    functioning.
  • C. The disturbance is not better accounted for b
    a Mood Disorder With Psychotic features,
    Schizoaffective Disorder, or Schizophrenia and is
    not due to the direct physiological effects of a
    substance (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication)
    or a general medical condition.

DSM-IV
40
BRIEF PSYCHOTIC DISORDER
  • Specify if
  • With Marked Stressor(s) (brief reactive
    psychosis) if symptoms occur shortly after and
    apparently in response to events that, singly or
    together, would be markedly stressful to almost
    anyone in similar circumstances in the person's
    culture
  • Without Marked Stressor(s) if psychotic symptoms
    do not occur shortly after, or are not apparently
    in response to events that, singly or together,
    would be markedly stressful to almost anyone in
    similar circumstances in the person's culture.
  • With Postpartum Onset if onset is within 4 weeks
    postpartum

DSM-IV
41
SCHRED PSYCHOTIC DISORDER
  • A. Delusion develops in an individual in the
    context of a close relationship with another
    person(s), who has an already-established
    delusion.
  • B. The delusion is similar in content to that of
    the person who already has the established
    delusion
  • C. The disturbance is not better accounted for by
    another psychotic disorder (e.g., Schizophrenia)
    or a Mood Disorder with Psychotic Features and is
    not due to the direct physiological effects of a
    substance (e.g., a drag of abuse, a medication)
    or a general medical condition.

DSM-IV
42
PSYCHOTIC DISORDER DUE TO (INDICATE THE GENERAL
MEDICAL CONDITION)
  • Psychotic Disorder Due to . . . (Indicate the
    General Medical Condition)
  • A. Prominent hallucinations or delusions.
  • B. There is evidence from the history, physical
    examination, or laboratory findings that the
    disturbance is the direct physiological
    consequence of a general medical condition.
  • C. The disturbance is not better accounted for by
    another mental disorder.
  • D. The disturbance does not occur exclusively
    during the course of a delirium.

DSM-IV
43
SUBSTANCE-INDUCED PSYCHOTIC DISORDER
  • A. Prominent hallucinations or delusions.
  • B. There is evidence from the history, physical
    examination, or laboratory findings of either (1)
    or (2)
  • the symptom in Criterion A developed during, or
    within month of substance intoxication or
    withdrawal
  • medication use is etiologically related to the
    disturbance

DSM-IV
44
SUBSTANCE-INDUCED PSYCHOTIC DISORDER
  • C. The disturbance ins not better accounted for
    psychotic disorder that is not substance induced.
    Evidence that symptoms are better accounted for
    the psychotic disorder the is not substance
    induced may include following
  • the symptoms precede the onset of the substance
    use (or medication use)
  • the symptoms persist for a substantial period of
    time (e.g., about month) after cessation of acute
    withdrawal or severe intoxication, or are
    substantially in excess of what would be expected
    given the type or amount of the substance used or
    the durations of use or there is other evidence
    that suggest s the existence of an independent
    non-substance-induced psychotic disorder (e.g. a
    history of recurrent non-substance-related
    episodes).

DSM-IV
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