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Psychotic Disorders

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Title: Psychotic Disorders


1
Psychotic Disorders
  • Schizophrenia
  • Delusional Disorder

2
Schizophrenia
  • Positive Symptoms
  • Symptoms found in schizophrenics
  • Negative Symptoms
  • Normal behaviors that are absent in schizophrenics

3
Positive Symptoms
  • Hallucinations(mostly auditory)
  • Delusions(delusions of grandeur and persecution
    are most common)
  • Speech disturbances(including word salad)
  • Disorganized behavior(including silliness, weird
    motor behaviors)
  • Inappropriate affect(emotional responses that are
    inappropriate for the circumstances, such as
    crying at comedy shows)

4
Negative Symptoms
  • Social withdrawal, limited speech and action,
    poor hygiene, apathy
  • Flat affect (no emotional response at all)

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Schizophrenia Types
  • Disorganized
  • Inappropriate affect actions
  • Incoherent verbal behavior silliness
  • Delusions hallucinations

9
Schizophrenia Types
  • Catatonic
  • Periods of frenzied activity alternating with
    periods of immobility
  • May stay in odd positions for hours

10
Schizophrenia Types
  • Paranoid
  • Delusions of grandeur
  • Delusions of persecution
  • Usually harmless, but may become violent if
    threatened

11
Schizophrenia Types
  • Undifferentiated
  • Used to describe schizophrenics with mixed or
    unusual symptoms

12
Causes
  • Brain Abnormalities
  • Excessive Dopamine Activity
  • Stress

13
Brain Abnormalities
  • Some schizophrenics have
  • Low frontal lobe activity
  • Undersize hippocampus,amygdala, or thalamus
  • Larger than normal ventricles

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Excess Dopamine
  • 2/3 of schizophrenics improve when given dopamine
    reducers
  • PET scans show excess dopamine activity in
    sufferers
  • Drugs that increase dopamine cause schizophrenic
    symptoms
  • People taking excessive L-dopahave schizophrenic
    symptoms

16
Genetic Aspects
  • Schizophrenia runs in families
  • Concordance is higher among closer relatives

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Treatments
  • Anti-psychotic drugs such as Phenothiazines,Butyro
    phenonesused to reduce dopamine levels
  • Stress reduction also appears helpful
  • Psychotherapy

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20
Anxiety Disorders
  • Panic disorders
  • Phobias
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

21
Panic Disorder
  • Intense, short-lived, recurring attacks of
    overwhelming anxiety or terror
  • May involve the limbic system

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Phobias
  • Phobia an unreasonable, excessive, or irrational
    fear
  • To be a phobia, there must be great distress or
    major interference with life

24
Phobias -Specific
  • Specific fear of a specific object, place, or
    event
  • situational phobias (elevator, airplane)
  • natural environment (water, height)
  • blood-injection-injury
  • animal phobias (dogs, snakes)

25
Phobias -Social
  • Social Phobias
  • fear of embarrassing or humiliating oneself in
    front of others (public speaking, eating in
    public places, writing in front of others)
  • Lead to avoidance of social situations

26
Phobias -Agoraphobia
  • "Fear of the marketplace"
  • Marked by intense fear when isolated in open
    spaces or in crowds
  • May develop after panic attacks.
  • The person may become Housebound.

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Systematic Desensitization
  • Teach subject to relax
  • Create a hierarchy of feared situations, from
    least to most
  • Work through situations, while maintaining
    relaxation

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Modeling
  • Provide a role model who does not show the fear
  • To be effective, the role model must be seen as
    like the person with the fear

31
Phobias Group Therapy
  • People with the same phobia often treated
    together
  • Thus, patients with milder fears serve as role
    models for those with more severe fears

32
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
  • Obsessions persistent, uncontrollable thoughts
  • Compulsions ritualistic acts one feels compelled
    to perform

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Biology O-C Disorders
  • OCD patients show excessive functioning in the
    frontal lobes the limbic system
  • OCD patients show serotonin imbalances that
    respond to depression medications

35
Somatoform Disorders
  • Hypochondriasis
  • Body Dysmorphic Disorder
  • Conversion Disorder
  • Pain Disorder
  • Somatization Disorder

36
Somatoform Disorders
  • Real physical symptoms with no biological cause
  • Hypochondriasis
  • Excessive attention to state of health, along
    with preoccupation with the minor aches and pains
    of living. may "doctor shop".
  • Conversion
  • Physical symptoms, such as paralyses and
    blindness, with no physical explanation
  • Treatment Psychotherapy and sometimes medication

37
Personality Disorders
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder

38
Personality Disorders
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • Marked by a lack of empathy, chronic
    underarousal, willingness to lie, cheat, steal,
    and break the law

39
Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • Pattern begins in childhood or early adolescence.
  • Possible Causes
  • emotional deprivation in childhood,
  • Observational learning,
  • problem in moral development,
  • genetic and biological factors

40
Sexual Disorders
  • Includes sexual dysfunctions and paraphilias
  • Only dysfunctions paraphilias causing distress
    to self or others are disorders

41
Paraphilias
  • Voyeurism Sexual attraction to watching
    unconsenting people nude or engaged in sexual
    activity
  • Fetishism Sexual attraction to inanimate objects
  • Pedophilia Sexual attraction to prepubescent
    children

42
Paraphilias
  • Exhibitionism Sexual attraction to exposing
    one's genitals to unsuspecting strangers
  • Masochism Sexual attraction to being bound,
    beaten, or made to suffer
  • Sadism Sexual attraction to hurting others

43
Paraphilias
  • Many arise through classical conditioning
  • Most are strengthened when the person fantasizes
    the attraction while masturbating

44
Personality Disorder Treatment
  • Treatment varies for the person and disorder, but
    generally
  • Psychotherapy
  • Medications
  • Antidepressant medications. Antidepressants may
    be useful if you have a depressed mood, anger,
    impulsivity, irritability or hopelessness, which
    may be associated with personality disorders.
  • Mood-stabilizing medications. As their name
    suggests, mood stabilizers can help even out mood
    swings or reduce irritability, impulsivity and
    aggression.
  • Anti-anxiety medications. These may help if you
    have anxiety, agitation or insomnia. But in some
    cases, they can increase impulsive behavior.
  • Antipsychotic medications. Also called
    neuroleptics, these may be helpful if your
    symptoms include losing touch with reality
    (psychosis) or in some cases if you have anxiety
    or anger problems.
  • Hospitalization or Residential Care

45
Other DSM-IV disorders..
  • SLEEP DISORDERS
  • Disorders which are characterised by a
  • significant sleep disturbance. Examples
  • include
  • Primary Insomnia difficulty getting to sleep or
    staying asleep
  • Narcolepsy irresistible attacks of refreshing
    sleep
  • Sleep Terror Disorder repeated occurrence of
    sleep terrors (awakenings from sleep usually
    beginning with a panicky scream or cry)

46
Other DSM-IV disorders..
  • INFANCY, CHILDHOOD OR
  • ADOLESCENT DISORDERS
  • Disorders which are usually first diagnosed in
  • infancy, childhood or adolescence . Examples
  • include
  • Reading Disorder reading achievement that is
    below that expected given the individuals
    chronological age
  • Stuttering a disturbance in the normal fluency
    and time pattering of speech
  • Encopresis the repeated passage of faeces into
    inappropriate places (e.g. clothing or floor).

47
Other DSM-IV disorders..
  • DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
  • Disorders in which there is a disruption in the
  • usually integrated functions of consciousness,
  • memory, identity or perception of the
    environment.
  • Examples include
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder the presence of
    two or more distinct identities/personalities
    within the same individual
  • Dissociative Amnesia an inability to recall
    important personal information, usually of a
    traumatic/stressful nature

48
Other DSM-IV disorders..
  • IMPULSE-CONTROL DISORDERS
  • Disorders in which there is a failure to resist
    an
  • impulse, drive or temptation to perform an act
    that is
  • harmful to the person or to others. Examples
    include
  • Kleptomania the recurrent failure to resist
    impulses to steal objects not needed for personal
    use or monetary value
  • Pyromania a pattern of fire setting for
    pleasure, gratification or relief of tension
  • Pathological gambling recurrent and persistent
    maladaptive gambling behaviour

49
Other DSM-IV disorders..
  • DELIRIUM, DEMENTIA AND AMNESTIC
  • OTHER COGNITIVE DISORDERS
  • Disorders in which there is a significant deficit
    in
  • cognition or memory. Examples include
  • Delirium a disturbance of consciousness
  • Dementia multiple cognitive deficits that
    include impairment in memory (e.g. Alzheimers)
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