1 / 15

SCHIZOPHRENIA AND ITS BIOLOGICAL BASIS

SCHIZOPHRENIA AND ITS BIOLOGICAL BASIS. UĞUR İŞBİTİREN 1890151 PSYC 374. OUTLINE. History & General Characteristics of Schizophrenia Brief Overview of Symptoms Biological Explanations of Schizophrenia Genetic Explanation Neurochemical Explanation Brain Abnormalities

brac
Download Presentation

SCHIZOPHRENIA AND ITS BIOLOGICAL BASIS

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 AND ITS BIOLOGICAL BASIS UĞUR İŞBİTİREN 1890151 PSYC 374

  2. OUTLINE • History & General Characteristics of Schizophrenia • Brief Overview of Symptoms • Biological Explanations of Schizophrenia • Genetic Explanation • Neurochemical Explanation • Brain Abnormalities • Other Biological Explanations • Conlusion

  3. HISTORY • FirstidentifedbyGermanPsychiatrist Emil Kraepelin as ‘‘DementiaPraecox’’ • Kraepelinmainlyunderlinedmentaldetoriation, extremesuspicion in additiontohallucinations, withdrawnbehavior, incapacityforregularworks • SwissPsychiatristEugenBleulernamed it as ‘‘Schizophrenia’’ withtoday’sdiagnosticcriteria Butcher, Mineka & Hooley, 2011

  4. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS • Type of psychoticdisorders • Loss of contactwithreality • Bizarrebehaviours • Mostinterestingandmostpuzzling • May be verydevastativeanddisruptive Passer et al, 2009

  5. SYMPTOMS • PositiveSymptoms (DSM-IV-TR) • Delusions • Hallucinations • Disorganizedspeech • Grosslydisorganizedorcatatonicbehavior • At leastforonemonth, twoormore of theabovemust be present. Barlow & Durand, 2012

  6. SYMPTOMS (cont’d) • NegativeSymptoms (DSM-IV-TR) • Avolition (littleinterestfordailyactivities) • Alogia (littlecontent in communication) • Anhedonia (lack of pleasurefromactivities) • AffectiveFlattening (lack of emotionsdisplayed) Barlow & Durand, 2012

  7. BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA • GeneticPredisposition • One of thestrongestevidence (Carlson, 2010) • Identicaltwins, 48% chancetohaveSchizophrenia (Butcher, Mineka & Hooley, 2011) • Responsiblegenesareunknown, foundthatinteraction of severalgenesplays role (Kalat, 2009).

  8. http://www.schizophrenia.com/research/hereditygen.htm

  9. BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS (cont’d) • DopamineHypothesis • Theneurochemicalperspective • Excessiveactivity in Dopaminepathwaysassociatedwithsymptoms • Challengedandadjustedseveraltimes, yet still, themostimportantneurochemicalexplanation (Comer, 2014). • Supportedbythefactthatsubstancesassociatedwithpsychoticeffectsincreasethedopaminerelease in thebrain • Emergence of AntipsychoticDrugswhichaffectDopaminerelease (Kalat, 2009)

  10. BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS (cont’d) • BrainAbnormalities • Supportedbylots of studies • PeoplewithSchizophreniahavelargerbrainventricles (spacescontaincerebrospinalfluid) (Jackobi & Winkler, 1927). • Lesserordeficientactivity in DorsolateralPrefrontalCortex (Berman & Weinberger, 1990). • SmallerThalamus size (Shenton et al., 2001). • Hippocampuscellabnormalities (Arnold, 2000). • AlsoabnormalitieswithBasalGanglia, LimbicSystem, Wernicke’ s Area; reduction in volume of GreyMatter, as a result of severalstudies. • Obviouscorrelation yet no cause-effectrelationship! Barlow & Durand, 2012; Butcher, Mineka & Hooley, 2011

  11. BRAIN IMAGES OF SCHIZOPHRENIC PATIENTS http://www.treatmentadvocacycenter.org/component/content/article/325

  12. http://www.pnas.org/content/98/20/11650/F3.expansion.html

  13. OTHER BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS • GlutamateHypothesis • Lowerrelease of neurotransmitterGlutomateseemsto be relatedwithpositiveandnegativesymptoms of Schizophrenia, based on studieswith PCP andKetamineSubstance • Relativelynewhypothesis, beinginvestigated • TheNeurodevelopmentalHypothesis • Based on the idea thatprenatalandneonatalproblems (viral, poornutrion, birthcomplicationsetc.) maycausebrainabnormalitieswhich can leadtodevelopment of Schizophrenia (Ballon, Dean & Cadenhead, 2007). Butcher, Mineka & Hooley, 2011; Kalat, 2009)

  14. CONCLUSION • Lots of strongevidencesthatsupportvariousbiologicalexplanations. • Majority of them can onlygivecorrelations, not cause-effectrelations! • Diathesis-Stress Model underlinestherelationshipbetweenobviousgenetic, structuralandenvironmentalaspectssuch as stress, regardingthedevelopment of Schizophrenia (Butcher, Mineka & Hooley, 2011).

  15. REFERENCES • Barlow, D. H. & Durand, V. M. (2012). AbnormalPsychology: An IntegrativeApproach. Belmont: Wadsworth. • Butcher, J. N., Mineka, S. & Hooley, J. M. (2011). AbnormalPsychology: CoreConcepts. Boston: Allyn & Bacon • Carlson, N. R. (2010). Physiology of Behaviour. Boston: Allyn & Bacon • Comer, R. J. (2014). Fundamentals of AbnormalPsychology. New York: WorthPublishers. • Kalat, J. W. (2009). BiologicalPsychology. Belmont: Wadsworth. • Passer, M., Smith, R., Holt, N., Bremner, A., Sutherland, E. & Vliek, M. (2009). Psychology: TheScience of MindandBehaviour. Berkshire: McGraw - Hill.

More Related