Psychosis and Symptom categories
Breakdown of Symptoms
Risk Factors
Facts and Stats
Psychotic Disorders
100

Define Psychosis

A state defined by a loss of contact with reality

Can be: substance-induced or caused by brain injury; or as a result of a psychotic mental disorder

100

Breakdown of Positive Symptoms

Delusions: grandiose, persecutory (most common), referential, thought control: insertion, withdrawal, broadcasting

Hallucinations: auditory (most common): sound, visual: sight, olfactory: smell, gustatory: taste, somatic/tactile: feel/touch

100

Genetics

heritability rate= ~.80

concordance rate is .40 to .50 for monozygotic twins (both will have it)

100

Prevalence of each of the disorders

Schizophrenia: overall: .25-.64% of adults

Schizophreniform: 0.2%, seen in males and females equally

Brief Psychotic: 2x more likely in females than males; unsure of overall lifetime prevalence

Schizoaffective: 0.3%

Delusional: 0.2%

100

Brief Psychotic Disorder

at least 1 positive psychotic symptom

duration:1 day to 1 month

returns to typical functioning

often triggered by extreme stress or trauma

200

Positive Symptoms

behavioral excess, delusions, and hallucinations


200

Breakdown of Negative Symptoms

flat affect: reduction of emotional expression

alogia: reduction of speech

avolition: reduction in goal-oriented, common tasks

anhedonia

200

Brain

enlarged ventricles in individuals with schizophrenia, failure in normal brain development, disrupted pathways between brain areas, areas related to cognition and language

200

Demographic Influences 

males>females, males tend to have symptoms at younger age, more severe

higher prevalence in urban settings, developing countries

200

Schizophreniform Disorder

2+ psychotic symptoms (one must be positive)

duration: symptoms last between 1-6 months

impairment: 1/3 recover to regular functioning

300

Negative Symptoms

Behavioral deficits, flat affect, absence of speech
300

Breakdown of Disorganized Symptoms

tangentiality: jumping from one topic to the next

neologism: creating new words

loose associations: disconnected or jumbled phrases

erratic behavior

catatonia: motor dysfunction, ranges from agitation to immobility

inappropriate affect: laughing or crying at improper times

300

Biochemical

dopamine theory: excess dopamine

dopamine theory: revised, more about its role in certain areas of the brain, info processing in cortex = larger number of dopamine receptors

300

Comorbidities

50%, also increased rates of suicide 

increased health problems: diabetes, infections, circulatory issues, heart disease, liver disease; severe side effects from medications: high blood pressure, weight changes, sleep problems

300

Schizophrenia

2+ psychotic symptoms; at least 6 months; at least 1 month of active symptoms

impairment: usually moderate to severe impairment

typical onset: late adolescence/early adulthood

median age of onset: ~22 years, late onset for females

400

Disorganized Symptoms

unusual speech, behavior, and/or affect 

also considered positive symptoms

400

Breakdown of Miscellaneous Symptoms

deficits in: multiple cognitive functions, retention and recall

processing difficulty: sensory overload= positive symptoms; withdrawing from sensory overload= negative symptoms

400

Myth: people with schizophrenia are violent and/or dangerous, influenced by media that links schizophrenia to criminal violence

Truth: violence is not a symtom of schizophrenia, majority of those with schizophrenia are arrested due to misdemeanors

400

Prognosis

only 31% receive care from a specialist, after 10 years after diagnosis: 15% stayed in active phase, 50% had enough improvement to work/live independently, 25% needed higher level of treatment and support to complete daily activities

average potential life lost in the U.S. is 28.5 years

400

Schizoaffective Disorder

schizophrenia & mood disorder (major depressive, manic, and/or hypomanic episode)

simultaneous (but independent), BUT psychotic disorder must be primary

500

Miscellaneous Symptoms

mania, depression, cognitive deficits

500

Brain explanations of both positive and negative symptoms

Pos: temporal lobe underdeveloped, auditory processing, language; amygdala, hippocampus smaller in schizophrenia, verbal and spatial memory, processing emotion

Neg: reduction in total brain size and grey matter, overall lobe size and cognition impaired, grey matter= routes sensory or motor information, frontal lobe deficits, complex information processing, organizing functioning

500

Phases of Schizophrenia

Prodromal phase: (weeks to months), peculiar behaviors, negative symptoms

psychotic prephase: (<2 months), first full-blown, positive symptoms

active phase: (at least 1 month), positive and negative symptoms, often multiple of each

residual phase: (variable), low-grade symptoms similar to prodromal phase, can return to functioning

500

Myth: people with schizophrenia are homeless

Truth: 11.6% of people with schizophrenia are homeless, 26.2% of individuals with Any severe mental illness are homeless

500

Delusional Disorder

at least 1 month delusions only, typically non-bizarre delusions

can be short-term or chronic

impairment depends on severity/focus of delusions

subtypes: erotomaniac, grandiose, jealous, persecutory, somatic, shared delusions

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