Schizophrenia

Definition: Initially referred to as ‘dementia praecox’, schizophrenia affects thoughts, emotions, and behaviours.

  • SIMPLE: Gradual withdrawal from reality.

  • PARANOID: Presence of delusions and hallucinations.

  • CATATONIC: Involves disturbances in motor activity.

Diagnostic Criteria (ICD-11)

  • Symptoms must persist for at least one month and cannot be attributed to other health conditions.

  • Symptoms categorised as either:

    • Positive Symptoms: e.g. persistent delusions, hallucinations, thought disorder, experiences of influence.

    • Negative Symptoms: e.g. avolition, flattened affect, impaired cognitive function, catatonia.

Aneja et al (2018)

  • Aim: To investigate early-onset schizophrenia through case studies.

  • Procedure: A case study of a boy who showed significant behavioural changes post-divorce, leading to schizophrenia diagnosed at age 12.

  • Findings: The boy experienced auditory hallucinations and aggressive behaviour despite medication.

  • Conclusion: Highlighted the complexities of early-onset schizophrenia.

  • Evaluation: Emphasises the use of case studies but limits generalisability.

Freeman et al (2003) – Key Study

  • Context: Explores the use of virtual reality (VR) to investigate persecutory ideation in healthy individuals.

  • Aim:

    • To see if individuals without a mental illness experience persecutory thoughts in a VR setting.

    • To identify cognitive or emotional predictors of such ideation.

  • Procedure:

    • 24 participants (12 male, 12 female) from University College London without mental illness history.

    • Participants used VR to explore a library scene with avatars showing ambiguous behaviour.

    • Measured paranoia levels before and after VR using a series of questionnaires, including the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) and VR-Paranoia questionnaire.

  • Findings: Significant correlation between scores on the paranoia questionnaire and interview. Increased interpersonal sensitivity and anxiety correlated with persecutory thoughts.

  • Conclusion: Individuals attribute mental states to VR characters, allowing for the investigation of persecutory ideation.

  • Evaluation: Highlights VR as a standardised approach to assess behaviours and brings insights on interpersonal sensitivity influencing thoughts.

Treatment and Management of Schizophrenia

  • Schizophrenia tends to develop in adolescence or early adulthood.

  • Affects men and women equally, but men suffer more severely.

  • 1/3 of diagnosed individuals improve with treatment, 1/3 worsen, 1/3 have long-term institutionalisation.

Onset and Prognosis

  • Before the dopamine hypothesis, treatment options were limited, often resulting in hospitalisation.

  • Antipsychotics emerged in the 1950s, targeting dopamine activity.

Dopamine Explanation

  • Antipsychotics reduce symptoms by blocking dopamine receptors (especially D2 receptors).

  • Typical antipsychotics: Phenothiazines like Haloperidol and Chlorpromazine.

Antipsychotic Medications

  • Typical (1st Generation): Block D2 receptors, effective on positive symptoms (delusions, hallucinations).

    • Side effects: Tardive Dyskinesia, extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), sedation, weight gain.

  • Atypical (2nd Generation): Bind less to D2, more to D1 and D4 receptors.

    • Examples: Risperidone, Olanzapine, Clozapine.

    • Side effects: Weight gain, drowsiness.

Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs)

  • Provide evidence for the effectiveness of antipsychotics, comparing treatment and control groups.

Sarkar and Grover (2013)
  • Aim: Assess effectiveness of antipsychotics in children/adolescents with schizophrenia.

  • Procedure: Meta-analysis of 15 studies comparing first- and second-generation.

  • Findings: Both generations superior to placebo; clozapine was most effective.

  • Conclusion: Extrapyramidal side effects more common in 1st generation drugs.

Third Generation Antipsychotics

  • Includes Lurasidone and Aripiprazole with fewer side effects.

ECT (Electroconvulsive Therapy)

  • Definition: Induction of seizures via electrical stimulation; used for severe cases.

  • Procedure: 6-12 sessions, monitors for memory loss, rarely causes lasting damage.

Zervas, Theleritis, and Soldatos (2012)

  • Aim: Review ECT’s effectiveness in schizophrenia.

  • Findings: Effective in treating catatonic schizophrenia and improving medication response.

  • Conclusion: More effective in conjunction with medication, especially for catatonia.

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT)

  • Definition: Cognitive treatment with behavioural elements focused on modifying thoughts and beliefs.

    • Models: Thoughts influence feelings and behaviours; improving coping skills is key.

Example Study: Senksy et al. (2000)

  • Aim: Test CBT effectiveness against a control group (befriending).

  • Procedure: 90 patients with distressing symptoms over 6 months; random assignment to treatments.

  • Findings: Both groups showed significant improvement, but CBT group maintained improvements at follow-up.

  • Conclusion: CBT positively impacts both positive and negative symptoms.

Strengths and Weaknesses of Treatments

Antipsychotic Medications

  • Strengths: Effective for positive symptoms, reduce relapse rates.

  • Weaknesses: Side effects, limited efficacy for negative symptoms, non-adherence issues.

ECT

  • Strengths: Rapid symptom relief for treatment-resistant cases, effective for severe agitation.

  • Weaknesses: Temporary effects, potential ethical concerns.

CBT

  • Strengths: Non-chemical; addresses cognitive distortions and coping mechanisms.

  • Weaknesses: Limited efficacy during acute episodes; access and cost issues.

Issues and Debates

  • Idiographic vs Nomothetic Approaches: Research generally aims for broad generalisations of effective treatments through robust data sets.

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