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Chapter Fourteen: Schizophrenia and Related Disorders

  • Schizophrenia: A psychotic disorder in which personal, social, and occupational functioning deteriorate as a result of unusual perceptions, odd thoughts, disturbed emotions, and motor abnormalities

    • Psychosis: A loss of contact with reality

    • Hallucinations: False sensory perceptions

    • Delusions: False beliefs

    • May withdraw into a private world

    • Symptoms must continue for six months or more in order to receive a diagnosis

  • 1 in every 100 people suffers from schizophrenia during their lifetime

  • Equal numbers of men and women experience the disorder

  • Average onset for men is 23 and average onset for women is 28

  • People with this disorder are much more likely to attempt suicide than the general population

  • People with this disorder have an increased risk of physical illness

  • Live 10-20 yrs fewer than other people

  • Found more frequently in the lower socioeconomic levels

    • Stress of poverty is a cause of the disorder

    • Downward Drift Theory: Schizophrenia causes its sufferers to fall from a higher to a lower socioeconomic level or to remain poor because they are unable to function effectively

The Clinical Picture of Schizophrenia

  • Most of today’s clinicians believe that schizophrenia is actually a group of distinct disorders that happen to have some features in common

What Are the Symptoms of Schizophrenia?

  • Most tend to have both positive and negative symptoms to some degree

  • Around half of those with schizophrenia have significant difficulties with memory and other kinds of cognitive functioning

  • Positive Symptoms: Excesses of thought, emotion, and behavior

    • Delusions: Ideas that people believe wholeheartedly but that have no basis in fact

      • May consider the ideas enlightening

      • May feel confused by them

      • Delusions of Reference: Attach special and personal meaning to the actions of others or to various objects or events

      • Delusions of Grandeur: Believe themselves to be specially empowered persons

      • Delusions of Control: Believe their feelings, thoughts, and actions are controlled by other people

    • Disorganized Thinking and Speech

      • May not be able to think logically and speak in peculiar ways

      • Formal Thought Disorder: A disturbance in the production and organization of thought

      • Cause the sufferer great confusion and make communication extremely difficult

      • Positive symptoms

        • Loose Associations / Derailment: A common thinking disturbance, characterized by rapid shifts from one topic of conversation to another

        • Neologisms: Made-up words that typically have meaning only to the person using them

        • Preservation: Repeating their words and statements again and again

        • Clang / rhyme

      • Some people may have disorganized speech or thinking long before their full pattern of schizophrenia unfolds

    • Heightened Perceptions and Hallucinations

      • Perceptions and attention of some people with schizophrenia seem to intensify

      • May feel that their senses are being flooded by all the sights and sounds that surround them

      • Makes it almost impossible for them to attend to anything important

      • Hallucinations: Perceptions that a person has in the absence of external stimuli

        • People with auditory hallucinations actually produce the nerve signals of sound in their brains, “hear” them, and then believe that external sources are responsible

        • Tactile Hallucinations: Tingling, burning, or electric-shock sensations

        • Somatic Hallucinations: Feel as if something is happening inside the body

        • Visual Hallucinations: May produce vague perceptions of colors or clouds or distinct visions of people or objects

        • Gustatory Hallucinations: Regularly find that their food or drink tastes strange

        • Olfactory Hallucinations: Smell odors that no one else does

      • Hallucinations and delusional ideas often occur together

    • Inappropriate Affect: Emotions that are unsuited to the situation

      • Undergo inappropriate shifts in mood

      • May be merely a response to other features of the disorder

  • Negative Symptoms: Deficits of thought emotion, and behavior

    • Poverty of Speech / Alogia: A reduction in speech or speech content

      • Think and say very little

      • Say quite a bit but still manage to convey little meaning

    • Restricted Affect: Display less anger, sadness, joy, and other feelings than most people

      • Flat Affect: Showing almost no emotions at all

      • may reflect an inability to express emotions as others do

    • Loss of Volition

      • Avolition / apathy

      • Feeling drained of energy and of interest in normal goals and unable to start or follow through on a course of action

      • Ambivalence: Conflicting feelings

    • Social Withdrawal

      • Withdraw from their social environment

      • Has the effect of distancing themselves further from reality

      • Leads to a breakdown of social skills

  • Psychomotor Symptoms: Unusual movements or gestures

    • Move relatively slowly

    • Make awkward movements or repeated grimaces and odd gestures

    • Catatonia: A pattern of extreme psychomotor symptoms, found in some forms of schizophrenia

      • Catatonic Stupor: People stop responding to their environment, remaining motionless and silent for long stretches of time

      • Catatonic Rigidity: People maintain a rigid, upright posture for hours and resist efforts to be moved

      • Catatonic Posturing: People assume awkward, bizarre positions for long periods of time

      • Catatonic Excitement: Different form of catatonia in which people move excitedly

    • Around 10% of people with schizophrenia experience some degree of catatonia

What Is the Course of Schizophrenia?

  • Usually first appears between the person’s late teens and mid-thirties

  • Relapses are apparently more likely during times of life stress

Diagnosing Schizophrenia

  • Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: Schizophrenia-like disorders that are distinguished by particular durations and sets of symptoms

How Do Theorists Explain Schizophrenia?

  • Diathesis-Stress relationship may be at work: People with a biological predisposition will develop schizophrenia only if certain kinds of events or stressors are also present

Biological Views

  • Genetic Factors

    • Some people inherit a biological predisposition to schizophrenia and develop the disorder later when they face extreme stress, usually during late adolescence or early adulthood

    • Schizophrenia and schizophrenia-like brain abnormalities are more common among relatives of people with the disorder

    • close family members are exposed to many of the same environmental influences as the person with schizophrenia, and it may be these influences that lead to the disorder

    • Identical twins have a higher concordance rate for schizophrenia than fraternal twins

    • A predisposition to schizophrenia could be the result of a prenatal problem

    • Biological relatives of adoptees with schizophrenia are more likely than their adoptive relatives to develop schizophrenia or another schizophrenia spectrum disorder

    • Schizophrenia is a polygenic disorder, caused by a combination of gene defects

  • Biochemical Abnormalities

    • Dopamine Hypothesis: Certain neurons that use the neurotransmitter dopamine fire too often and transmit too many messages, producing the symptoms of schizophrenia

    • Antipsychotic Drugs: Drugs that help correct grossly confused or distorted thinking

    • Phenothiazines: A group of antihistamine drugs that became the first group of effective antipsychotic medications

    • Second-generation Antipsychotic Drugs: A relatively new group of antipsychotic drugs whose biological action is different from that of the first-generation antipsychotic drugs

  • Dysfunctional Brain Structures and Circuitry

    • Schizophrenia-related brain circuit

    • Prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, striatum, substantia nigra

    • The structures function and interconnect in problematic ways that are unique to this disorder

    • Particular structures in the circuit may be hyperactive or underactive among people with schizophrenia

    • Interconnectivity between particular structures in the circuit is typically excessive or diminished for people with schizophrenia

    • May be two distinct subcircuits whose various structures sometimes overlap

  • Viral Problems

    • Brain abnormalities may result from exposure to viruses before birth

    • Unusually large number of people with schizophrenia are born during the late winter

      • Could be because of an increase in fetal or infant exposure to viruses at that time of year

    • Mothers of people with schizophrenia were more likely to have been exposed to the flu during pregnancy

Psychological Views

  • The Psychodynamic Explanation

    • Schizophrenogenic Mother: A type of mother - supposedly cold, domineering, and uninterested in the needs of her children - who was once thought to cause schizophrenia in her child

      • Little research support

      • Rejected by most of today’s psychodynamic theorists

    • Biological deficiencies cause people with schizophrenia to develop a fragmented, rather than integrated, self

  • Cognitive Behavioral Explanations

    • Operant Conditioning: The process by which people learn to perform behaviors for which they have been rewarded frequently

      • Most people in life become proficient at reading and responding to social cues and respond to these cues in a socially acceptable way

      • Some people aren’t reinforced for their attention to social cues, so they stop attending to such cues and focus instead on irrelevant cues

      • As they attend to irrelevant cues more and more, their responses become increasingly bizarre

      • Bizarre responses are rewarded with attention or other types of reinforcement, making them likely to be repeated

      • Circumstantial support for this explanation

      • Only considered a partial explanation

    • Misinterpreting Unusual Sensations

      • Brains of people with schizophrenia are actually producing strange and unreal sensations when they have hallucinations and related perceptual experiences

      • When the individuals attempt to understand their unusual experiences, more features of their disorder emerge

      • Draw incorrect and bizarre conclusions

Sociocultural Views

  • Multicultural Factors

    • 2.1% of African Americans receive a diagnosis of schizophrenia

      • More prone to developing schizophrenia

      • Clinicians are unintentionally biased in their diagnoses of African Americans

      • Clinicians misread cultural differences of symptoms of schizophrenia

    • 1.4% of non-Hispanic white Americans receive a diagnosis of schizophrenia

    • African Americans with schizophrenia are overrepresented in state hospitals

    • Schizophrenic patients who live in developing countries have better recovery rates than schizophrenic patients in developed countries

  • Social Labeling

    • Features of schizophrenia are influenced by the diagnosis

    • Once the label is assigned, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy

    • People who are labeled schizophrenic may be viewed and treated as crazy

  • Family Dysfunction

    • Schizophrenia is often linked to family stress

    • Parents of people with schizophrenia often

      • display more conflict

      • have more difficulty communicating with one another

      • are more critical of and overinvolved with their children than other parents

    • Expressed Emotion: The general level of criticism, disapproval, and hostility expressed in a family

      • People recovering from schizophrenia are considered more likely to relapse if their families are rated high in expressed emotion

    • Could be that people with schizophrenia greatly disrupt family life and help produce the observed family problems

Developmental Psychopathology View

  • Genetically inherited predisposition to the disorder

  • May lead to schizophrenia if the individual experiences significant life stressors, difficult family interactions, and / or other negative environmental factors

  • Overreactive HPA stress pathway and chronic stress reactions lead to the development of a dysfunctional immune system

Psychological and Sociocultural Models Lag Behind

  • Most clinical theorists now believe that schizophrenia is caused by a combination of factors

  • Researchers must identify psychological and sociocultural factors with greater precision

A

Chapter Fourteen: Schizophrenia and Related Disorders

  • Schizophrenia: A psychotic disorder in which personal, social, and occupational functioning deteriorate as a result of unusual perceptions, odd thoughts, disturbed emotions, and motor abnormalities

    • Psychosis: A loss of contact with reality

    • Hallucinations: False sensory perceptions

    • Delusions: False beliefs

    • May withdraw into a private world

    • Symptoms must continue for six months or more in order to receive a diagnosis

  • 1 in every 100 people suffers from schizophrenia during their lifetime

  • Equal numbers of men and women experience the disorder

  • Average onset for men is 23 and average onset for women is 28

  • People with this disorder are much more likely to attempt suicide than the general population

  • People with this disorder have an increased risk of physical illness

  • Live 10-20 yrs fewer than other people

  • Found more frequently in the lower socioeconomic levels

    • Stress of poverty is a cause of the disorder

    • Downward Drift Theory: Schizophrenia causes its sufferers to fall from a higher to a lower socioeconomic level or to remain poor because they are unable to function effectively

The Clinical Picture of Schizophrenia

  • Most of today’s clinicians believe that schizophrenia is actually a group of distinct disorders that happen to have some features in common

What Are the Symptoms of Schizophrenia?

  • Most tend to have both positive and negative symptoms to some degree

  • Around half of those with schizophrenia have significant difficulties with memory and other kinds of cognitive functioning

  • Positive Symptoms: Excesses of thought, emotion, and behavior

    • Delusions: Ideas that people believe wholeheartedly but that have no basis in fact

      • May consider the ideas enlightening

      • May feel confused by them

      • Delusions of Reference: Attach special and personal meaning to the actions of others or to various objects or events

      • Delusions of Grandeur: Believe themselves to be specially empowered persons

      • Delusions of Control: Believe their feelings, thoughts, and actions are controlled by other people

    • Disorganized Thinking and Speech

      • May not be able to think logically and speak in peculiar ways

      • Formal Thought Disorder: A disturbance in the production and organization of thought

      • Cause the sufferer great confusion and make communication extremely difficult

      • Positive symptoms

        • Loose Associations / Derailment: A common thinking disturbance, characterized by rapid shifts from one topic of conversation to another

        • Neologisms: Made-up words that typically have meaning only to the person using them

        • Preservation: Repeating their words and statements again and again

        • Clang / rhyme

      • Some people may have disorganized speech or thinking long before their full pattern of schizophrenia unfolds

    • Heightened Perceptions and Hallucinations

      • Perceptions and attention of some people with schizophrenia seem to intensify

      • May feel that their senses are being flooded by all the sights and sounds that surround them

      • Makes it almost impossible for them to attend to anything important

      • Hallucinations: Perceptions that a person has in the absence of external stimuli

        • People with auditory hallucinations actually produce the nerve signals of sound in their brains, “hear” them, and then believe that external sources are responsible

        • Tactile Hallucinations: Tingling, burning, or electric-shock sensations

        • Somatic Hallucinations: Feel as if something is happening inside the body

        • Visual Hallucinations: May produce vague perceptions of colors or clouds or distinct visions of people or objects

        • Gustatory Hallucinations: Regularly find that their food or drink tastes strange

        • Olfactory Hallucinations: Smell odors that no one else does

      • Hallucinations and delusional ideas often occur together

    • Inappropriate Affect: Emotions that are unsuited to the situation

      • Undergo inappropriate shifts in mood

      • May be merely a response to other features of the disorder

  • Negative Symptoms: Deficits of thought emotion, and behavior

    • Poverty of Speech / Alogia: A reduction in speech or speech content

      • Think and say very little

      • Say quite a bit but still manage to convey little meaning

    • Restricted Affect: Display less anger, sadness, joy, and other feelings than most people

      • Flat Affect: Showing almost no emotions at all

      • may reflect an inability to express emotions as others do

    • Loss of Volition

      • Avolition / apathy

      • Feeling drained of energy and of interest in normal goals and unable to start or follow through on a course of action

      • Ambivalence: Conflicting feelings

    • Social Withdrawal

      • Withdraw from their social environment

      • Has the effect of distancing themselves further from reality

      • Leads to a breakdown of social skills

  • Psychomotor Symptoms: Unusual movements or gestures

    • Move relatively slowly

    • Make awkward movements or repeated grimaces and odd gestures

    • Catatonia: A pattern of extreme psychomotor symptoms, found in some forms of schizophrenia

      • Catatonic Stupor: People stop responding to their environment, remaining motionless and silent for long stretches of time

      • Catatonic Rigidity: People maintain a rigid, upright posture for hours and resist efforts to be moved

      • Catatonic Posturing: People assume awkward, bizarre positions for long periods of time

      • Catatonic Excitement: Different form of catatonia in which people move excitedly

    • Around 10% of people with schizophrenia experience some degree of catatonia

What Is the Course of Schizophrenia?

  • Usually first appears between the person’s late teens and mid-thirties

  • Relapses are apparently more likely during times of life stress

Diagnosing Schizophrenia

  • Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: Schizophrenia-like disorders that are distinguished by particular durations and sets of symptoms

How Do Theorists Explain Schizophrenia?

  • Diathesis-Stress relationship may be at work: People with a biological predisposition will develop schizophrenia only if certain kinds of events or stressors are also present

Biological Views

  • Genetic Factors

    • Some people inherit a biological predisposition to schizophrenia and develop the disorder later when they face extreme stress, usually during late adolescence or early adulthood

    • Schizophrenia and schizophrenia-like brain abnormalities are more common among relatives of people with the disorder

    • close family members are exposed to many of the same environmental influences as the person with schizophrenia, and it may be these influences that lead to the disorder

    • Identical twins have a higher concordance rate for schizophrenia than fraternal twins

    • A predisposition to schizophrenia could be the result of a prenatal problem

    • Biological relatives of adoptees with schizophrenia are more likely than their adoptive relatives to develop schizophrenia or another schizophrenia spectrum disorder

    • Schizophrenia is a polygenic disorder, caused by a combination of gene defects

  • Biochemical Abnormalities

    • Dopamine Hypothesis: Certain neurons that use the neurotransmitter dopamine fire too often and transmit too many messages, producing the symptoms of schizophrenia

    • Antipsychotic Drugs: Drugs that help correct grossly confused or distorted thinking

    • Phenothiazines: A group of antihistamine drugs that became the first group of effective antipsychotic medications

    • Second-generation Antipsychotic Drugs: A relatively new group of antipsychotic drugs whose biological action is different from that of the first-generation antipsychotic drugs

  • Dysfunctional Brain Structures and Circuitry

    • Schizophrenia-related brain circuit

    • Prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, striatum, substantia nigra

    • The structures function and interconnect in problematic ways that are unique to this disorder

    • Particular structures in the circuit may be hyperactive or underactive among people with schizophrenia

    • Interconnectivity between particular structures in the circuit is typically excessive or diminished for people with schizophrenia

    • May be two distinct subcircuits whose various structures sometimes overlap

  • Viral Problems

    • Brain abnormalities may result from exposure to viruses before birth

    • Unusually large number of people with schizophrenia are born during the late winter

      • Could be because of an increase in fetal or infant exposure to viruses at that time of year

    • Mothers of people with schizophrenia were more likely to have been exposed to the flu during pregnancy

Psychological Views

  • The Psychodynamic Explanation

    • Schizophrenogenic Mother: A type of mother - supposedly cold, domineering, and uninterested in the needs of her children - who was once thought to cause schizophrenia in her child

      • Little research support

      • Rejected by most of today’s psychodynamic theorists

    • Biological deficiencies cause people with schizophrenia to develop a fragmented, rather than integrated, self

  • Cognitive Behavioral Explanations

    • Operant Conditioning: The process by which people learn to perform behaviors for which they have been rewarded frequently

      • Most people in life become proficient at reading and responding to social cues and respond to these cues in a socially acceptable way

      • Some people aren’t reinforced for their attention to social cues, so they stop attending to such cues and focus instead on irrelevant cues

      • As they attend to irrelevant cues more and more, their responses become increasingly bizarre

      • Bizarre responses are rewarded with attention or other types of reinforcement, making them likely to be repeated

      • Circumstantial support for this explanation

      • Only considered a partial explanation

    • Misinterpreting Unusual Sensations

      • Brains of people with schizophrenia are actually producing strange and unreal sensations when they have hallucinations and related perceptual experiences

      • When the individuals attempt to understand their unusual experiences, more features of their disorder emerge

      • Draw incorrect and bizarre conclusions

Sociocultural Views

  • Multicultural Factors

    • 2.1% of African Americans receive a diagnosis of schizophrenia

      • More prone to developing schizophrenia

      • Clinicians are unintentionally biased in their diagnoses of African Americans

      • Clinicians misread cultural differences of symptoms of schizophrenia

    • 1.4% of non-Hispanic white Americans receive a diagnosis of schizophrenia

    • African Americans with schizophrenia are overrepresented in state hospitals

    • Schizophrenic patients who live in developing countries have better recovery rates than schizophrenic patients in developed countries

  • Social Labeling

    • Features of schizophrenia are influenced by the diagnosis

    • Once the label is assigned, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy

    • People who are labeled schizophrenic may be viewed and treated as crazy

  • Family Dysfunction

    • Schizophrenia is often linked to family stress

    • Parents of people with schizophrenia often

      • display more conflict

      • have more difficulty communicating with one another

      • are more critical of and overinvolved with their children than other parents

    • Expressed Emotion: The general level of criticism, disapproval, and hostility expressed in a family

      • People recovering from schizophrenia are considered more likely to relapse if their families are rated high in expressed emotion

    • Could be that people with schizophrenia greatly disrupt family life and help produce the observed family problems

Developmental Psychopathology View

  • Genetically inherited predisposition to the disorder

  • May lead to schizophrenia if the individual experiences significant life stressors, difficult family interactions, and / or other negative environmental factors

  • Overreactive HPA stress pathway and chronic stress reactions lead to the development of a dysfunctional immune system

Psychological and Sociocultural Models Lag Behind

  • Most clinical theorists now believe that schizophrenia is caused by a combination of factors

  • Researchers must identify psychological and sociocultural factors with greater precision