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Scizophrenia
It is a disorder characterized by apathy, avolition, and affective blunting. These patients have alterations in thoughts, perceptions, mood, and behavior. Many schizophrenics display delusions, hallucinations and misinterpretations of reality.
DSM-IV Diagnostic Criteria
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Two or more of the following symptoms present for one month
- Delusions
- Hallucinations
- Disorganized speech
- Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior of scizophrenia
- Negative symptoms, i.e., affective flattening, alogia, avolition
- Decline in social and/or occupational functioning since the onset of
- Continuous signs of illness for psychosis, psychotic at least six months with at least one month of active symptoms
- Schizoaffective disorder and mood disorder with psychotic features have been
- The disturbance is not due to substance abuse or medical condition
- If history of autistic disorder or pervasive developmental disorder is present, scizophrenia may be diagnosed only if prominent delusions or hallucinations have been present for
Clinical Features
- No sign or symptom is pathognomonic.
- Prior history of scizotypal or schizoid personality traits or disorder are often present.
- Depressive symptoms may be present, but duration of these symptoms has been brief compared to duration of the psychotic symptoms.
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Many symptoms are categorized as either positive or negative.
Positive Symptoms:
- Hallucinations are most commonly auditory or visual, but can occur in any sensory modality.
- Delusions
- Disorganized behavior
- Thought disorder characterized by loose associations, tangentiality, incoherent thoughts, neologisms, thought blocking, thought insertion, thought broadcasting, and ideas of reference.
Negative Symptoms:
- Poverty of speech or poverty of thought content
- Anhedonia
- Flat affect
- Loss of motivation (avolition)
- Attentional deficits
- The presence of tactile, olfactory or gustatory hallucinations may indicate an organic etiology such as complex partial seizures.
- Sensorium and memory are intact unless the patient is too psychotic to engage in testing.
- Insight and judgment frequently impaired.
Epidemiology
- Lifetime prevalence of is one percent.
- Onset of psychosis usually occurs in late teens or
- Males and females are equally affected, but mean age of onset is approximately six years later in females, and females frequently have a milder course of illness.
- The suicide rate is ten times that of normals, and the rate is close to the rate that occurs in depressive illnesses.
- More than 75% of patients are smokers, and an increased incidence of substance abuse has been found (especially alcohol, cocaine, and marijuana.)
- Most do not return to baseline functioning, and most patients follow a chronic downward course, but some have a gradual improvement with a decrease in positive symptoms and increased functioning. Very few have a
Classification
- Paranoid Type
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- Characterized by a preoccupation with one or more delusions or frequent auditory hallucinations.
- No prominent disorganization of speech, disorganized or catatonic behavior, or flat or inappropriate affect.
- Disorganized Type : Characterized by prominent disorganized speech, disorganized behavior, and flat or inappropriate affect.
- Catatonic Type : Characterized by at Least Two of the Following:
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- Motoric immobility
- Excessive motor activity
- Extreme negativism or mutism
- Peculiar voluntary movements such as bizarre posturing
- Echolalia or echopraxia
- Undifferentiated Type : Meets criteria, but can not be characterized as paranoid, disorganized or catatonic type.
- Residual Type : Characterized by absence of prominent delusions, disorganized speech and grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior and continued negative symptoms or two or more
Differential Diagnosis
- Psychotic Disorder Due to a General Medical Condition, Delirium, or Dementia.
- Substance Induced Psychotic Disorder: Amphetamines and cocaine frequently cause hallucinations, paranoia, or delusions. Phencyclidine (PCP) may lead to both positive and negative symptoms.
- Schizoaffective Disorder: Moods symptoms are present for a significant portion of the illness. In duration of mood symptoms is brief compared to the entire duration of the illness.
- Mood Disorder with Psychotic Features
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- Psychotic symptoms occur only during major mood disturbance (mania or major depression).
- Disturbances of mood frequent in all phases.
- Delusional Disorder: Non-bizarre delusions in absence of