1 / 24

Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia. www.psychlotron.org.uk. Schizophrenia is not a multiple personality A psychotic disorder involving a break with reality Many different manifestations with a few shared features. Schizophrenia diagnosis. Positive Symptoms:

verena
Télécharger la présentation

Schizophrenia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Schizophrenia www.psychlotron.org.uk • Schizophrenia is not a multiple personality • A psychotic disorder involving a break with reality • Many different manifestations with a few shared features

  2. Schizophrenia diagnosis • Positive Symptoms: • Hallucinations e.g. hearing voices, feeling bugs under skin • Experiences of being controlled • Disordered thinking – inability to think straight • Negative symptoms: • Flat or blunted affect (i.e. lack of emotional expression), apathy, and social withdrawal. Alogia (apparent inability or unwillingness to speak), or avolition (apparent inability or unwillingness to direct own activities) • Social & occupational dysfunction • Duration of several months

  3. Schizophrenia prevalence www.psychlotron.org.uk • 1% lifetime risk in general population • Holds true for most geographical areas although rates do vary • Abnormally high in Southern Ireland, Croatia; significantly lower rates in Italy, Spain (Torrey, 2002) • Risk factors include low SES, minority ethnicity, urban residence

  4. Schizophrenia onset www.psychlotron.org.uk Source: CIHI (2001)

  5. Schizophrenia prognosis • ‘Rule of the thirds’ (rule of thumb): • 1/3 recover more or less completely • 1/3 episodic impairment • 1/3 chronic decline • Confirmed in US & UK (Stevens, 1978) • With treatment about 60% of patients manage a relatively normal life

  6. Schizophrenia explanations • Biological • Genetics • Neurochemicals & hormones • Structural brain abnormalities • Psychological • Family dynamics • Life stress • Urbanicity

  7. Schizophrenia: genetics • Prevalence of schizophrenia is the same all over the world (about 1%) • Supports a biological view as prevalence does not vary with environment • However, there are variations within broad geographical areas (e.g. Torrey 2002 – Croatia & Ireland) • Urbanicity data

  8. Schizophrenia: genetics www.psychlotron.org.uk Source: Gottesman (1991)

  9. Schizophrenia: genetics www.psychlotron.org.uk • Adoption studies

  10. Schizophrenia: genetics • Substantial evidence for a genetic contribution • Some evidence disputed: • Shared environment issues • All the evidence also suggests environmental triggers

  11. Schizophrenia & dopamine • The dopamine hypothesis: • Schizophrenia is caused by excessive DA activity. • This causes abnormal functioning of DA-dependent brain systems, resulting in schizophrenic symptoms • DA can increase or decrease brain activity depending on the system you’re looking at psychlotron.org.uk

  12. The dopamine hypothesis • Wise & Stein (1973) report abnormally low levels of DBH in post-mortem studies of S patients • Would suggest abnormally high DA activity as DBH needed to break DA down • Can’t rule out cause of death or post-mortem changes as a source or error

  13. The dopamine hypothesis • Overdose of amphetamine (DA agonist – agonist = a substance that initiates a response when combined with a receptor) can produce S-like symptoms. S patients have abnormally large responses to low amphetamine doses • Suggests a role for DA in S symptoms • Suggests that the issue is over-sensitivity to DA rather than excessive DA levels

  14. The dopamine hypothesis • S symptoms can be treated with DA antagonists (substances that intefere with the physiological action of others) (e.g. chlorpromazine). These are effective in 60% of cases with more impact on positive symptoms. • Supports role of DA again, but what about 40% who don’t respond? • Lack of impact on negative symptoms hints at two separate syndromes

  15. Biology and Schizophrenia • Consistent evidence for abnormal brain functioning in S patients but no single factor identified. • Two syndromes? One caused by DA activity & associated with +ve symptoms; other caused by brain degeneration (e.g. enlarged brain ventricles) & associated with –ve symptoms. • Cause & effect issues everywhere

  16. Behaviourist • Schizophrenia is the result of faulty learning in childhood. • E.g. parental disinterest leads to child focusing on inappropriate environmental cues as opposed to normal social ones. • Some evidence to support in social skills training.

  17. Humanistic - Family Systems Theory • Origins in: • The psychoanalytical tradition (the influence of the family on abnormal behaviour) • Systems thinking (idea that things are best understood by looking at the relationships between a set of entities)

  18. F M C1 C3 C2 Family System A family can be seen as a set of entities, each interacting with all the others. The behaviour of each entity can only be understood by looking at its relationships with the others psychlotron.org.uk

  19. F M C1 C3 C2 Family System If one person starts to behave abnormally the problem might not lie within that person Their behaviour may be a manifestation of a problem occurring within the wider family system C2 psychlotron.org.uk

  20. Double Bind Theory (Bateson, 1956) • Schizophrenia is a consequence of abnormal patterns in family communication • The patient is a ‘symptom’ of a family-wide problem • They become ‘ill’ to protect the stability of the family system psychlotron.org.uk

  21. Double Bind Theory • In a double bind situation a person is given mutually contradictory signals by another person • This places them in an impossible situation, causing internal conflict • Schizophrenic symptoms represent an attempt to escape from the double bind psychlotron.org.uk

  22. Double Bind Theory • Bateson (1956) reports clinical evidence (interviews, observations) illustrating use of double bind communication by parents of schizophrenia patients • Issues of researcher (confirmatory) bias • Problems with direction of causality psychlotron.org.uk

  23. Double Bind Theory • Liem et al (1974) compared communication patterns in families with & without a schizophrenic member • Abnormality in parental communication was a response to the schizophrenic symptoms, not vice versa psychlotron.org.uk

  24. Double Bind Theory • Some evidence that family processes play a role in relapse of schizophrenia patients following stabilisation • Relapse more likely (58% vs. 10%) where family is high in ‘expressed emotion’ (Brown et al, 1966) • Families high in criticism, hostility & over-involvement lead to more relapse (Vaughn & Leff, 1976)

More Related