Abnormal Psychology by Kring, Davison, Neale & Johnson (12th edition) - a summary
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Clinical psychology
Chapter 9
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia: a disorder characterized by disturbances in thought, emotion and behavior.
>1% prevalence
Slightly more men than women.
Sometimes develops in childhood, but usually appears in late adolescence or early adulthood
people with schizophrenia typically have a number of episodes of their symptoms and less severe but still debilitating symptoms between episodes.
The range of symptoms in the diagnosis of schizophrenia is extensive, although people with schizophrenia typically have only some of these problems at any given time.
No single essential symptom must be present for a diagnosis of schizophrenia.
Researchers divided symptoms in three
DSM-5 criteria of schizophrenia
Positive symptoms
Positive symptoms comprise excesses and distortions, such as hallucinations and delusions.
For the most part, acute episodes of schizophrenia are characterized by positive symptoms.
Delusions
Delusions: beliefs contrary to reality and firmly held in spite of disconfirming evidence.
Common symptoms in schizophrenia.
Delusions take several forms including:
Delusions are also found in other diagnoses,
Hallucinations and other disturbances of perception
Hallucinations: sensory experiences in the absence of any relevant information for the environment.
More often auditory than visual.
Negative symptoms
The negative symptoms of schizophrenia consists of behavioral deficits.
Include:
Negative symptoms tend to endure beyond an acute episode and have profound effects on the lives of people with schizophrenia.
The presence of many negative symptoms is a strong predictor of a poor quality of life.
Avolition
A lack of motivation and a seeming absence of interest in or an inability to persist in what are usually routine activities, including work or school, hobbies, or social activities.
Asociality
Severe impairments in social relationships.
They may wish to spend much of their time alone.
Anhedonia
Anhedonia: a loss of interest in or a reported lessening of the experience of pleasure.
Two types o of pleasure experiences in the anhedonia construct:
People with schizophrenia appear to have a deficit in anticipatory pleasure but not consummatory pleasure.
Blunted affect
A lack of outward expression of emotion.
Only the outward expression of emotion, not the patient’s inner experience, which is not impoverished at all.
People with schizophrenia report experiencing the same amount or even more emotion than people without schizophrenia.
Alogia
A significant reduction in the amount of speech.
Disorganized symptoms
Include disorganized speech and disorganized behavior
Disorganized speech
Problems in organizing ideas and in speaking so that a listener can understand.
Disorganized speech is associated with problems in executive functioning. Also related to the ability to perceive semantic information.
Disorganized behavior
Takes many forms.
They seem to lose the ability to organize their behavior and make it conform to community standards. They also have difficulty performing the tasks of everyday living.
Movement symptoms
Disturbances in movement behavior: grossly abnormal psychomotor behavior.
Catatonia: unusual increase in their overall level of activity, including much excitement, wild flailing of the limbs, and great expenditure of energy similar to that seen in mania.
Catatonic immobility: people adopt unusual postures and maintain them for very long periods of time.
Waxy flexibility: another person can move the patient’s limbs into positions that the patient will then maintain for long periods of time.
Schizophrenia and the DSM-5
Schizophreniform disorder: the same as schizophrenia, but lasts from 1 to 6 months
Brief psychotic disorder: from 1 day to 1 month. Often brought by extreme stress.
Must include hallucinations, delusions, or disorganized speech
Delusional disorder: troubled by persistent delusions of persecution or by delusional jealousy.
Genetic factors
Schizophrenia has a genetic component.
Schizophrenia is genetically heterogeneous, genetic factors can vary from case to case.
Behavior genetics research
Genetics play a role
Negative symptoms have a stronger genetic component than do positive symptoms.
Familial high-risk study: begins with one or two biological parents with schizophrenia and follows their offspring longitudinally in order to identify how many of these children may develop schizophrenia.
Positive and negative symptoms may have different etiologies.
Molecular genetics research
The predisposition of schizophrenia is not transmitted by a single gene.
Genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia may be made up of many rare mutations.
The role of neurotransmitters
Dopamine theory
An excess in dopamine. Way to much
An excess of dopamine receptors appears to be related mainly to positive symptoms.
Other neurons
Glutamine may also play a role.
Brain structure and function
Enlarged ventricles
Factors involving the prefrontal cortex
The number of neurons do not appear to be reduced. Loss dendritic spines.
Problems in the temporal cortex and surrounding regions
People with schizophrenia have structural and functional abnormalities in the temporal cortex.
Reduced hippocampus volume, may reflect a combination of genetic and environmental factors.
Stress reactivity and a disrupted HPA (hippocampic-pituitary-adrenal) axis likely contribute to the reductions in hippocampal volume.
Environmental factors influencing the developing brain
Why late?
Psychological factors
People with schizophrenia appear to be very reactive to the stressors we encounter in daily life.
Socioeconomic status and urban living
There is a sharp upturn in the prevalence of schizophrenia in people of the lowest socioeconomic status.
Social selection hypothesis: people with schizophrenia drift into poor neighborhoods because their illness impairs their earning power and they cannot afford to live elsewhere.
Sociogenetic hypothesis: stressors associated with socioeconomic status and urban living contribute to the development of schizophrenia
Research is more supportive of the social selection hypothesis
Family-related factors
Some role for the family.
Family can have an important impact on the adjustment of people with schizophrenia after they leave the hospital.
Expressed emotion (EE)
In high-EE families, critical comments by family members led to increased expression of unusual thoughts by people with schizophrenia. And unusual thoughts expressed by the relatives with schizophrenia led to increased critical comments.
Developmental factors
Retrospective studies
Prospective studies
Treatments for schizophrenia most often include a combination of short-term hospital stays, medication, and psychosocial treatment.
Medications
First-generation antipsychotic drugs and their side effects
Some symptoms may go away, but lives are still not fulfilling for many people with schizophrenia.
Commonly reported side effects of all antipsycotics include:
Second-generation antipscyhotic drugs and their side effects
Psychological treatments
Social skills training
Teach people with schizophrenia how to successfully manage a wide variety of interpersonal situations.
Typically involves role-playing and other group exercises to practice skills, both in a therapy group and in actual social situations.
Family therapies
Cognitive behavior therapy
The maladaptive beliefs of some people with schizophrenia can benefit from cognitive behavior therapy.
Cognitive remediation therapies
Enhance basic cognitive functions.
Cognitive training improved symptoms and functional outcomes.
Psychoeducation
Effective in reducing relapse
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This is a summary of Abnormal Psychology by Kring, Davison, Neale & Johnson. This summary focuses on clincal psychology and mental health. Discussed are etliolgies of disorders and treatments.
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Abnormal Psychology Tania Ajmal mirza contributed on 20-05-2022 07:00
It is very easy and informative
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