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Chapter 13
Schizophrenia Spectrum and
Other Psychotic Disorders
Amber Gilewski
Tompkins Cortland Community College
The “Positive” Symptom Cluster
The Positive Symptoms
– Active manifestations of abnormal behavior
– Distortions of normal behavior
Delusions: The Basic Feature of Madness
– Gross misrepresentations of reality
– Include delusions of grandeur or persecution
Hallucinations
– Experience of sensory events without
environmental input
– Can involve all senses (auditory most common)
The “Negative” Symptom Cluster
The Negative Symptoms
– Absence or insufficiency of normal behavior
Spectrum of Negative Symptoms
– Avolition (or apathy) – Lack of initiation and
persistence
– Alogia – Relative absence of speech
– Anhedonia – Lack of pleasure, or
indifference
– Affective flattening – Little expressed
emotion
The “Disorganized” Symptom Cluster
The Disorganized Symptoms
– Severe and excess speech, behavior, and emotion
Nature of Disorganized Speech
– Cognitive slippage – Illogical and incoherent speech
– Tangentiality – “Going off on a tangent”
– Loose associations – Conversation in unrelated
directions
• Inappropriate affect -
– Odd emotional behavior
Disorganized Behavior
– Includes a variety of unusual behaviors
Other Disorders with Psychotic Features:
Schizophreniform Disorder
Schizophreniform Disorder
– Schizophrenic symptoms for a few months
– Associated with good premorbid
functioning
– Most resume normal lives
– Lifetime prevalence of 0.2%
Other Disorders with Psychotic Features:
Schizoaffective Disorder
Schizoaffective Disorder
– Symptoms of schizophrenia and a mood
disorder
– Both disorders are independent of one
another
– Prognosis is similar for people with
schizophrenia
– Such persons do not tend to get better on
their own
Other Disorders with Psychotic Features:
Delusional Disorder
– Delusions that are contrary to reality
– Lack other positive and negative symptoms
– Types of delusions include:
Erotomanic: higher status figure love
Grandiose: inflated importance
Jealous: unwarranted beliefs of infidelity
Persecutory: most common; conspired against
Somatic: physical defects, disease, disorder
– Extremely rare
– Better prognosis than schizophrenia
Additional Disorders with Psychotic
Features: Brief Psychotic Disorder
Brief Psychotic Disorder
– One or more positive symptoms of
schizophrenia
– Usually precipitated by extreme stress or
trauma
– Tends to remit on its owns
Schizophrenia: Some Facts and Statistics
Onset and Prevalence of Schizophrenia worldwide
– About 0.2% to 1.5% (1% population in US)
– Often develops in early adulthood
– Can emerge at any time
– Women have better prognosis
Schizophrenia Is Generally Chronic
– Life expectancy is slightly less than average
Developmental Research
Brain damage – during prenatal or infancy
periods may be a cause of schizophrenia
Early brain abnormality – may have better
prognosis due to brain’s plasticity (ability to
compensate)
Older adult’s symptoms – demonstrate that
the illness may improve over time
Levels of impairment – fluctuates between
moderate and severe; relapse is common
Causes of Schizophrenia:
Findings From Genetic Research
Family Studies
– Inherit a tendency for schizophrenia, not forms of
schizophrenia
– Risk increases with genetic relatedness
Twin Studies
- Monozygotic twins – Risk for schizophrenia is 48%
- Fraternal (dizygotic) twins – Risk drops to 17%
Adoption Studies -- Risk for schizophrenia remains
high
Causes of Schizophrenia:
Neurotransmitter Influences
The Dopamine Hypothesis
– Drugs that increase dopamine (agonists)
Result in schizophrenic-like behavior
– Drugs that decrease dopamine (antagonists)
Reduce schizophrenic-like behavior
Neurological damage?
-Structural and Functional Abnormalities in the Brain
– Enlarged ventricles and reduced tissue volume
Location of the cerebrospinal fluid in the
human brain
Fig. 13.7, p. 486
Causes of Schizophrenia:
Psychological and Social Influences
The Role of Stress
– May activate underlying vulnerability
– May also increase risk of relapse
Family Interactions
– Families – Show ineffective communication
patterns
– High expressed emotion –
associated with relapse
Medical Treatment of Schizophrenia
Historical
Treatment
primitive brain
surgeries in 1500s
prefrontal lobotomies
used in 1950’s
modern treatment
using neuroleptic
drugs
www.cerebromente.org.br/n02/historia/psico08.jpg
Biological Interventions
The 1930’s
www.minddisorders.com/images/gemd_02_img0087.jpg
Insulin coma therapy: insulin induced
hypoglycemia resulting in convulsions & coma
Psychosurgery: disconnecting frontal lobes
ECT: aka “shock therapy”; not beneficial
The 1950’s: development of antipsychotic
(neuroleptic) medications
– Often the first line treatment for schizophrenia
– Newer medications have fewer serious side
effects
Medical Treatment of Schizophrenia
(continued)
– Compliance with medication is often a problem
(medical relationship, cost, poor supports, side
effects)
– Acute and permanent side effects are
common
Akinesia: absence, loss, or impairment of
the power of voluntary movement
Tardive dyskinesia:
twitching of the face, trunk, or limbs
Psychosocial Treatment of Schizophrenia
– Behavioral (i.e., token economies) on inpatient
units
– Community care programs: outpatient;
reducing institutionalization
– Social and living skills training: teaching
appropriate behaviors
– Independent living skills: encouraged in
community care programs
– Behavioral family therapy: helping families to
be more supportive
– Vocational rehabilitation: aiding in job skills
and employment
NAME THAT SYMPTOM!
Disorder of thought
content or delusion
Delusion of grandeur
Delusion of
persecution
Auditory hallucination
Visual hallucination
Olfactory hallucination
Tactile hallucination
Tangentiality
Loose association
Waxy flexibility &
catatonic immobility
Echopraxia
Echolalia
Alogia
Disorganized
behavior