1 / 32

Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia. Overview. Most debilitating and costly of all adult psychiatric illnesses ~25% of all psychiatric beds are occupied by persons with schizophrenia 2002 fiscal costs of schizophrenia was 62.7 billion Greatest burden is lost productivity. Schizophrenia. Multisystem disease

brenna
Download Presentation

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

  2. Overview • Most debilitating and costly of all adult psychiatric illnesses • ~25% of all psychiatric beds are occupied by persons with schizophrenia • 2002 fiscal costs of schizophrenia was 62.7 billion • Greatest burden is lost productivity

  3. Schizophrenia • Multisystem disease • Often difficult to describe and understand • No single feature is pathogonomic of Schizophrenia • Associated with a constellation of signs and symptoms • A disease that affects many domains of human functioning • COGNITION • EMOTION • INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS • Debilitating: 25-60% live with relatives • 10-20% are homeless • -

  4. Epidemiology • 2.2 million people have schizophrenia at any given time • One year prevalence rates are 1-4.6% • Prevalence rates are roughly stable across a range of populations and cultures • Persons with schizophrenia in developing countries may have a better course and prognosis • Persons with schizophrenia are less likely to marry (particularly males) and less likely to complete higher education • Between 14-20% of those with schizophrenia are employed competitively

  5. Onset and Course of Illness • Onset typical in late adolescence or early adulthood • Prodromal period or changes in mood and behavior prior to first break may last up to five years • Early versus late onset illness • Early signs date back to childhood • Deficits in verbal memory • Deficits in attentional vigilance • Deficits in gross motor skills • May be additional interpersonal difficulties or other difficulties in functioning • Early conduct disorder may also be prodromal • Early signs may be subtle, irregular, and graduate and more apparent in adolscence

  6. Factors Assoc. with Better Prognosis • Good premorbid adjustment • Acute onset • Later afe at onset • Being female • Precipitating event • Associated mood disturbance • Brief duration of active phase symptoms • Good interepisode functioning • Minimum residual symptoms • Absence of structural brain abnormalities • No family history of schizophrenia

  7. Schizophrenia A. Two or more of the following during 1- month period (or less if successfully treated): (1) delusions* (2) hallucinations* (3) disorganized speech (frequent derailment or incoherence) (4) grossly disorganized or catatonic behaviour (5) negative symptoms (affective flattening, alogia, avolition) B. Social Occupational Dysfunction C. Duration: at least 6 months, with 1 month of active phase symptoms (or less if successfully treated) May include Prodromal/Residual periods

  8. Schizophrenia (con’t) D. Schizoaffective and Mood Disorder exclusion C. Substance/general medical condition exclusion E. Relationship to a Pervasive Developmental Disorder Specify course: Episodic with Interepisode Residual Symptoms - with prominent negative symptoms Episodic with No Interepisode Residual Symptoms - continuous (prominent psychotic symptoms) - with prominent negative symptoms Single Episode in Partial Remission - with prominent negative symptoms Single Episode in Full Remission Other or Unspecified Pattern

  9. Differential Diagnosis of Psychosis • Mood Disorder with Psychotic features • Prolonged Substance Abuse • Brain Damage • Infections • Neurohereditary Disorders • Nutritional Abnormalities

  10. Positive Symptoms

  11. Disorganized Symptoms

  12. Negative Symptoms

  13. SchizophreniaSubtypes • Can change over the course of the illness • Catatonic Type • Disorganized Type • Paranoid Type • Undifferentiated Type • Residual Type

  14. Catatonic Type Clinical Picture is dominated by at least two of the following: (1) motoric immobility as evidenced by catalepsy (2) excessive motor activity (3) extreme negativism (4) peculiarities of voluntary movement (5) echolalia or echopraxia

  15. Disorganized Type Following criteria are met: A. All of the following are prominent: (1) disorganized speech (2) disorganized behaviour (3) flat or inappropriate affect B. The criteria are not met for Catatonic Type

  16. Paranoid Type Following criteria are met: A. Preoccupation with one or more delusions or frequent auditory hallucinations B. None of the following is prominent: disorganized speech disorganized or catatonic behaviour flat or inappropriate affect

  17. Undifferentiated Type Type of Schizophrenia where symptoms: (1) Meet Criterion A (2 Are not met for the Paranoid, Disorganized or Catatonic type

  18. Residual Type Following criteria are met: A. Do not fit into an other categories B. Evidence of a disturbance as indicated by: presence of negative symptoms or two or more symptoms listed in Criterion A

  19. Schizophreniform Disorder • Criteria A, D, and E of Schizophrenia are met • An episode of the disorder (including prodromal, active • and residual phases) lasts at least 1 month but less than 6 • months. • “Provisional” when without recovery • Specify if: Without Good Prognostic Features • With Good Prognostic Features

  20. Schizoaffective Disorder • Uninterrupted period of illness where there is either: • Major Depressive Episode, Manic or Mixed concurrent • with symptoms meeting Criterion A for Schizophrenia • Major depressive episode must meet A1 criterion • During illness, two week period of delusions or • hallucinations in absence of prominent mood symptoms • Symptoms meeting criteria for mood episode present for • substantial period of the total duration of illness • Not better accounted for substance use or general medical • condition • Specify Bipolar or Depressive Type

  21. Delusional Disorder A. Nonbizarre delusions of at least 1 months duration B. Criterion A for Schizophrenia has never been met C. Functioning is not markedly impaired or bizarre D. If there are mood episodes concurrent with delusions, their total duration is brief relative to periods of delusional periods. E. Not due to effects of substance or a general medical condition

  22. Delusional Disorder (con’t) • Specify type: • Erotomanic Type: another person, usually of higher status • in love with the person • Grandiose Type: inflated worth, power, knowledge, identity • Jealous Type: unfaithful theme • Persecutory Type: Conspiracy theme • Somatic Type: Physical defect theme • Mixed Type: more than one of the above • Unspecified Type: cannot be determined

  23. Comorbidity • Depression is very common with a comorbidity rate of 45% • Approximately 10% of those with schizophrenia die from the illness though more recent estimates have lowered this to 4-5.6% • Suicide risk is greater with mood and substance use disorders • Anxiety disorders have a high rate of comorbidity (43%) and may prompt the formation and maintenance of persecutory delusions and hallucinations • Lifetime comorbidity for substance use disorders is 50% • Associated symptoms also include anger, hostility, and social avoidance

  24. Violence and Associated Issues • Rates of violence for persons with schizophrenia are lower than rates for persons with depression or bipolar disorder • If violence occurs it is typically a result of the co-occuring substance use • Rates of victimization risk can be very high • 34%-54% report childhood sexual or physical abuse • 43%-81% report some type of lifetime victimization

  25. Sex differences in Illness Course • Women have later age at onset • Women have better premorbid histories • Women express more affective symptomatology • Women exhibit more benign course in terms of • hospitalizations and social functioning • Women appear to have less structural brain damage • Males appear to have a higher incidence of the illness

  26. Importance of Estrogen • Pregnancy confers protective advantage • Postpartum increased risk for psychotic symptoms • Psychotic symptoms increase when estrogen levels • are lowest during menstrual cycle • Hormone supplements appear to offset psychotic • symptoms during the menstrual cycle

  27. ETIOLOGY

  28. Biological • Genetics • Linkage Analysis • Genetic Markers • Heritability • Twin Studies • Adoption Studies

  29. Brain Abnormalities • Enlarged Ventricles • Frontal Lobe • Hypofrontality • Temporal Lobe • Neurochemical

  30. Brain Abnormalities

  31. Psychological Factors • Expressed Emotion: Jill Hooley • -Concerns the degree to which family members are either critical of a recently hospitalized patient, hostile, or express overinvolved and overprotective attitudes toward the patient. This construct is thought to reflect disturbances in the organization, emotional climate, and transactional patterns of the entire family system • Assessed in the Camberwell Family Interview and usually takes 1-2 hours • Most important element of EE is criticism • EE is a reliable risk factor for relapse in schizophrenia

  32. Diathesis/Personality/Stress: Schizophrenia • Stressor • > Family based communication deviance • Expressed emotion assoc with increased risk of relapse; critical and overinvolved (effect size .31) • Severe prolonged stressors studied • High rates of criterion A stressors • Diathesis • Heterogeneity within the etiology • DA involvement but complex; DA receptor sensitivity? • Enlargement of Ventricles, particularly for males • Polygenic vulnerability • Hypofrontality, particularly for negative symptoms • Severe birth complications • Viral infections • Personality • Psychoticism historically but New data on Neuroticism • Schizotypal personality • In childhood lower scores on intelligence and ach • In childhood less responsive in social situations • In childhood more diff with motor dev • Escalating adjustment diff, dep, social withdrawal, irritability, noncompliance

More Related