abnormal psychology oltmanns and emery chapter thirteen schizophrenic disorders presented by: mani...

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Abnormal Abnormal Psychology Psychology Oltmanns and Oltmanns and Emery Emery Chapter Thirteen Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: presented by: Mani Rafiee Mani Rafiee

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Page 1: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Abnormal PsychologyAbnormal PsychologyOltmanns and EmeryOltmanns and Emery

Chapter ThirteenChapter ThirteenSchizophrenic DisordersSchizophrenic Disorders

presented by:presented by:Mani Rafiee Mani Rafiee

Page 2: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

• SymptomsSymptoms

• DiagnosisDiagnosis

• FrequencyFrequency

• CausesCauses

• TreatmentTreatment

Chapter OutlineChapter Outline

Page 3: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• The most common symptoms of The most common symptoms of schizophrenia include changes in the way a schizophrenia include changes in the way a person thinks & feelsperson thinks & feels

• No single symptom or specific set of No single symptom or specific set of symptoms. symptoms.

• combinations of psychotic symptomscombinations of psychotic symptoms

• both the patients and their families.both the patients and their families.

OverviewOverview

Page 4: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• The onset of schizophrenia typically occurs The onset of schizophrenia typically occurs during adolescence or early adulthood. during adolescence or early adulthood.

• ages of 15 and 35.ages of 15 and 35.

• three phases of variable and unpredictable duration: prodromal, active, and residual.

• Prodromal signs and symptoms are similar to those associated with schizotypal personality disorder.

• The The residual phase residual phase follows the active phase follows the active phase similar in many respects to those seen during similar in many respects to those seen during the prodromal phase.the prodromal phase.

OverviewOverview

Page 5: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

• The symptoms of schizophrenia can be divided The symptoms of schizophrenia can be divided into three dimensions: positive symptoms, into three dimensions: positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and disorganization.negative symptoms, and disorganization.

• Positive symptoms, Positive symptoms, also called also called psychotic psychotic symptoms, symptoms, include hallucinations and delusions. include hallucinations and delusions.

• In contrast, In contrast, negative symptoms negative symptoms include include characteristics such as lack of initiative, social characteristics such as lack of initiative, social withdrawal, and deficits in emotional withdrawal, and deficits in emotional responding.responding.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 6: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

• Some additional symptoms of schizophrenia, Some additional symptoms of schizophrenia, such as incoherent or disorganized speech, such as incoherent or disorganized speech, do not fit easily into either the positive or do not fit easily into either the positive or negative types. negative types.

• Verbal communication problems and bizarre Verbal communication problems and bizarre behavior represent this third dimension, behavior represent this third dimension, which is sometimes called disorganization.which is sometimes called disorganization.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 7: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• Hallucinations Hallucinations areare sensory experiences that are sensory experiences that are not caused by actual external stimuli.not caused by actual external stimuli.

• those experienced by schizophrenic patients are those experienced by schizophrenic patients are most often auditory.most often auditory.

• delusions, or idiosyncratic beliefs that are rigidly held in spite of their preposterous nature.

• Common delusions include the belief that thoughts are being inserted into the patient’s head, that other people are reading the patient’s thoughts, or that the patient is being controlled by mysterious, external forces.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 8: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• Many delusions focus on grandiose or paranoid content.

• In actual clinical practice, delusions are complex and difficult to define.

• Their content is sometimes bizarre and confusing.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 9: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

Negative SymptomsNegative Symptoms

• Blunted affect, or affective flattening, involves a flattening or restriction of the person’s nonverbal display of emotional responses.

• Another type of emotional deficit is called anhedonia, which refers to the inability to experience pleasure.

• Many people with schizophrenia become socially withdrawn.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 10: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Negative Symptoms (continued)Negative Symptoms (continued)

• poverty of speech, patients show remarkable reductions in the amount of speech.

• In another form, referred to as thought blocking, the patient’s train of speech is interrupted before a thought or idea has been completed.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 11: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

DisorganizationDisorganization

• Some symptoms of schizophrenia do not fit easily into either the positive or negative type.

• Thinking disturbances and bizarre behavior represent a third symptom dimension, which is sometimes called disorganization.

• One important set of schizophrenic symptoms, known as disorganized speech, involves the tendency of some patients to say things that don’t make sense.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 12: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

Disorganization (continued)Disorganization (continued)

• Schizophrenic patients may exhibit various forms of unusual motor behavior.

• Catatonia most often refers to immobility and marked muscular rigidity, but it can also refer to excitement and overactivity.

• Catatonic posturing is often associated with a stuporous state, or generally reduced responsiveness.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 13: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Disorganization (continued)Disorganization (continued)

• Another kind of bizarre behavior involves affective responses that are obviously inconsistent with the person’s situation.

• The most remarkable features of inappropriate affect are incongruity and lack of adaptability in emotional expression.

SymptomsSymptoms

Page 14: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Brief Historical PerspectiveBrief Historical Perspective

• Kraepelin’s term dementia praecox was,

• Bleuler suggested a new name for the disorder—schizophrenia.

• This term referred to the splitting of mental associations, which Bleuler believed to be the fundamental disturbance in schizophrenia.

•  Bleuler's four A's: (disturbance of) affect, association, ambivalence and autism

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 15: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

DSM-IV-TRDSM-IV-TR

• DSM-IV-TR lists several specific criteria for schizophrenia.

• The first requirement (Criterion A) is that the patient must exhibit two (or more) active symptoms for at least 1 month.

• The DSM-IV-TR definition also takes into account social and occupational functioning as well as the duration of the disorder (Criteria B and C).

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 16: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee
Page 17: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

SubtypesSubtypes

• DSM-IV-TR recognizes five subtypes of schizophrenia.

• The catatonic type is characterized by symptoms of motor immobility (including rigidity and posturing) or excessive and purposeless motor activity.

• The disorganized type of schizophrenia is characterized by disorganized speech, disorganized behavior, and flat or inappropriate affect.

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 18: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

SubtypesSubtypes

• The most prominent symptoms in the paranoid type are systematic delusions with persecutory or grandiose content.

• The undifferentiated type of schizophrenia includes schizophrenic patients who display prominent psychotic symptoms and either meet the criteria for several subtypes or otherwise do not meet the criteria for the catatonic, disorganized, or paranoid types.

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 19: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

SubtypesSubtypes

• The residual type includes patients who no longer meet the criteria for active phase symptoms but nevertheless demonstrate continued signs of negative symptoms or attenuated forms of delusions, hallucinations, or disorganized speech.

• They are in “partial remission.”

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 20: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Related Psychotic DisordersRelated Psychotic Disorders

• Schizoaffective disorder is defined by an episode in which the symptoms of schizophrenia partially overlap with a major depressive episode or a manic episode.

• People with delusional disorder do not meet the full symptomatic criteria for schizophrenia, but they are preoccupied for at least 1 month with delusions that are not bizarre.

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 21: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

Related Psychotic Disorders (continued)Related Psychotic Disorders (continued)

• Brief psychotic disorder is a category that includes those people who exhibit psychotic symptoms—delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, or grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior—for at least 1 day but no more than 1 month.

DiagnosisDiagnosis

Page 22: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Schizophrenia Spectrum & other psychotic disorders in DSM 5

• The DSM-IV subtypes of schizophrenia (i.e., paranoid, disorganized, catatonic, undifferentiated, and residual types) are eliminated

• Main change of schizoaffective disorder is the requirement that a major mood episode be present for a majority of the disorder’s total duration after Criterion A has been met

Page 23: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Schizophrenia Spectrum & other psychotic disorders in DSM 5

• Criterion A for delusional disorder no longer has the requirement that the delusions must be nonbizarre.

• DSM-5 no longer separates delusional disorder from shared delusional disorder

Catatonia: • The criteria for catatonia is now uniform for

all contexts

Page 24: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• Most studies in Europe and the United States have reported lifetime morbid risk figures of approximately 1 percent.

FrequencyFrequency

Page 25: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Gender Differences

• Most epidemiological studies have reported that across the life span men and women are equally likely to be affected by schizophrenia.

• males younger by about 4 or 5 years than the average age at which schizophrenic women first experience problems.

• Male patients are more likely than female patients to exhibit negative symptoms.

FrequencyFrequency

Page 26: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Cross-Cultural Comparisons

• Schizophrenia has been observed in virtually every culture that has been subjected to careful scrutiny.

FrequencyFrequency

Page 27: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Biological Factors

• Research evidence points clearly toward some type of genetic influence in the transmission of schizophrenia.

• The family history data are consistent with the hypothesis that the transmission of schizophrenia is influenced by genetic factors.

CausesCauses

Page 28: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Biological Factors (continued)

• Linkage analysis has not been able to identify a specific gene for schizophrenia, but it has implicated regions on a small number of chromosomes that may contribute to the etiology of the disorder.

• For example, reports of positive linkage on regions of chromosomes 6, 8, 13, and 22 have been verified by more than one laboratory.

CausesCauses

Page 29: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• Pregnancy and Birth Complications

• Viral Infections (winter month's birth)

• Neuropathology decrease in total volume of brain tissue structural changes limbic system enlarged lateral ventricles frontal cortex

CausesCauses

Page 30: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Neurochemistry

• Scientists have proposed various neurochemical theories to account for the etiology of schizophrenia.

• The most influential theory, known as the dopamine hypothesis, focuses on the function of specific dopamine pathways in the limbic area of the brain.

CausesCauses

Page 31: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Social Factors

• The evidence supporting an inverse relationship between social class and schizophrenia is substantial.

• Adverse social and economic circumstances may increase the probability that persons who are genetically predisposed to the disorder will develop its clinical symptoms.

CausesCauses

Page 32: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Psychological Factors

• The family environment does have a significant impact on the course (as opposed to the etiology) of schizophrenia.

• Families is high in expressed emotion.

Integration and Multiple Pathways

CausesCauses

Page 33: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Copyright © Prentice Hall 2007

Antipsychotic Medication

• Antipsychotic drugs reduce the severity of, and sometimes eliminate, psychotic symptoms.

• Classical antipsychotics are also known as neuroleptic drugs because they also induce side effects that resemble the motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.

TreatmentTreatment

Page 34: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Antipsychotic Medication (continued)

• Atypical antipsychotics are less likely than the classical antipsychotics to produce unpleasant motor side effects.

• Atypical antipsychotics also produce side effects, such as weight gain and obesity.

• All antipsychotic medications—both traditional and atypical forms—act by blocking dopamine receptors in the cortical and limbic areas of the brain.

TreatmentTreatment

Page 35: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

Psychosocial Treatment

• Family treatment programs attempt to improve the coping skills of family members, recognizing the burdens that people often endure while caring for a family member with a chronic mental disorder.

• There are several different approaches to this type of family intervention.

• Most include an educational component that is designed to help family members understand and accept the nature of the disorder.

TreatmentTreatment

Page 36: Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery Chapter Thirteen Schizophrenic Disorders presented by: Mani Rafiee

• Various forms of cognitive therapy have been used to treat schizophrenia.

• Some patients are chronically disturbed and require long-term institutional treatment.

• Social learning programs, sometimes called token economies, can be useful for these patients.

TreatmentTreatment