Schizophrenia Spectrum
1.0 Schizophrenia Spectrum (Split mind). 2
6.0 Other Psychotic Disorders. 5
· 7.2 Structural and Functional Brain Abnormalities: 5
· 8.1 Social drift and urban birth: 6
· 8.4 Cognitive Perspective. 6
· 8.5 Cross-Cultural Perspective. 6
· 9.2 Psychological and Social Treatment. 7
1.0 Schizophrenia Spectrum (Split mind)
- 5 Domains of symptoms (4 positive , 1 negative)
- Cognitive deficits (not criteria for diagnosis)
- Anhedonia (but feel same amount of emotion and more physical arousal)
- Recovery rate (40% employed, 37% functioning well)
- Negative symptoms are the bigger problem (marker for low socioeconomic status)
Psychosis: Being unable to differentiate between reality and illusion
2.0 Symptoms
- 2.1 Positive Symptoms: Overt expression
- Delusions
- Hallucinations
- Disorganized thought + speech + behaviour- Delusions: Person believes things that are highly unlikely or untrue, that are not amenable to change
! Not self-deceptions !
à because, not possible, actively behave in concordance with the belief, resist neg. evidencepersecutory delusions: being watched, tormented, spied after
delusion of reference: random events are meant to tell them something, related to them
grandiose delusion: believe that one is special or perceives superpower
delusion of thought insertion: belief that thoughts are controlled from outside
à can occur together in a story
à difference in content from cultural difference, maybe not abnormal if culture holds this belief
- Hallucinations: Unreal perceptual experiences, sometimes entwined with delusions
auditory: hearing voices, music à often negative qualities
visual: seeing things à often entwined with auditory
tactile: something is happening outside, but to the body
somatic: something is happening inside the body
à can be culture specific
- Disorganized speech:
formal thought disorder: - Switch topics wildly without coherent transition (loose association,
derailment)
- Can also be totally unrelated words or new words (neologisms)
- Associations made not by meaning but by sound (clangs)
à women suffer less, cause speech in their brain works bilateral
- Disorganized behaviour / catatonic: Unpredictable untriggered agitation, shouting, swearing
- Sometimes occur with delusions, hallucinations
- Cant organize daily routines (dressing, eating, bathing)
- Socially unacceptable behaviour
Catatonia: Behavior that is unresponsive to the environment
- Lack of response to instructions (negativism)
- Rigid, bizarre postures, total lack of response (mutism)
- Purposeless excessive motor activity (catatonic excitement)
- 2.2 Negative Symptoms: Loss of qualities of the person
- persistent
- difficult to treat- Restricted affect: - Reduction or absence of emotional epression
- No eyecontact, gestures, or emotional content
- Voice is monoton, emphasis, intonation, rhythm, tempo- Avolition/Asociality: - Inability to initiate/persist on set goals (work, school, home)
- Slowed movement, unmotivated
- Lack desire to interact with other people
- Deficit in attention, memory, processing speed
- Cannot manipulated or hold memory good
- Unable to filter relevant or irrelevant information (or find source of information)
à Affects social functioning severely
à Eventually cause of delusions or hallucinations when they try to make sense of the information
à Can lead to further symptoms and perpetuate or make it worse
- Relatives show cognitive impairment as well
- Early marker is congnitive impairment during childhood
- Disorder since 19 century ( earlier called dementia praecox)
- Links between aspects of the mind are not there
- Symptoms can be similar to autism spectrum (therefore psychosis symptoms must be present)
- 2+ symptoms of psychosis (delusion, hallucination, disorganized speech) acute minimum 1 month
à acute phase
- additionally other symptoms that impair functioning for minimum 6 months
prodromal symptoms: before acute phase
residual symptoms: after acute phase
à indicate start or diminishing of the active phase (symptoms are less worse)
- Mostly years of impairment
- 10 years less life-expectancy
- Suffer more from infections and other diseases
- 10-15% suicide rate
- Functioning improves with age (cause reduction in dopamine levels?)
- Women: - better prognosis
- better recovery rate, less hospitalization, social adjustment
- Less cognitive deficits, less brain abnormality
- Better prenatal development (less likelihood for disorder)
à Estrogen affects dopamine regulation in positive way
- Sociocultural factors: - Developing countries better recovery rate à collectivist culture, lower discrimi.
6.0 Other Psychotic Disorders
- Schizoaffective disorder: Mix with Mood-Disorder (manic episode, MDD)
- Requires at least 2 weeks of psychotic symptoms - Schizophreniform disorder: Criteria A,D,E and symptoms last from 1-6 months, not more
- Quick onset of symptoms
- 66% will develop Schizophrenia - Brief psychotic disorder: Sudden onset of psychotic features, disorganized behaviour
- Episode lasts between 1 day and 1 month
- Usually excellent recovery - Delusional disorder: Delusions that last min 1 month, no other psychotic symptoms, lack in functioning !!
- Females are more at risk - Schizotypal personality disorder: Lifelong pattern of oddities and bad self-concept, thinking, behaviour, relation
ships
- No sense of independent self and trouble setting realistic goals.
- Restricted emotional expression or odd
- can´t understand others and have few relationships
- Perceive others as deceitful, hostile à socially anxious, isolated
- Can´t hold up attention, bad memory, learning
à have same genetic traits and neurological abnormalities
7.0 Biological Theories:
- 7.1 Genetics:
- polygenetic disease
- genetic transmission
- 50% genes shared = 10% chance of schizophrenia, 25% = 3%, normal population risk 1-2%
- Twinstudies: 80% of variation in schizophrenia is determined by genetical factors 20% epigenetic/psychosocial
- 7.2 Structural and Functional Brain Abnormalities:
- reduction of gray matter in cortex (medial, temporal, superior, prefrontal)
à prefrontal cortex (attention, planning, emotional expression) connects to limbic system (emotion + cognition)
,basal ganglia (motor movement) and other areas.
- Affects volume and shape of hippocampus (memory formation) à abnormality also found in relatives
- reduction of white matter (connects parts of brain) in parts of working memory
- Enlarged ventricles (fluid filled spaces in brain)- Abnormalities can be tied to birth complications (perinatal hypoxia) à epigenetic factor
- Influenza /herpes epidemics /famine, (especially 2nd trimester of pregnancy) à brain development stage
- 7.3 Neurotransmitters:
- Dopamine dysfunction in different areas (excess/lack)
- 1. Theory: Dopamine alone, supported by evidence of dopamine regulating drugs
- 2. Theory: Negative symptoms not controlled by dopamine à something else must be in play
à more complicated theory proposes that mesolimbic system (subcortic, salience and reward) has excess activity
of dopamine. Low dopamine activity in prefrontal cortex à leads to negative symptoms
- Serotonin also plays important role (regulate dopamine activity
- GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid
- Glutamate neurons (Major excitatory pathway in cortex, limbic system, thalamus (lack leads to cognitive +
emotional symptoms)
8.0 Psychosocial Theories
- 8.1 Social drift and urban birth:
- Social drift: symptoms interfere with functioning à person drifts downward in socioeconomic status
- Urban birth: 5x times more likely to develop schizophrenia à exposed to viruses and co
- 8.2 Stress and Relapse:
- Stressful episodes trigger disorder/relapse
- downward spiral (prodromal symptoms lead to withdrawal, and so on)
- 8.3 Family:
- First theorists blamed mothers (double bind situations = conflicting messages to child)
à develop distorted view of themselves and othersexpressed emotion: Conflicting messages, anger and hostility + sometimes support toward ill person.
à Ill person is overwhelmed by ambiguous information à can´t cope with all the stress
à symptoms of schizophrenia
- Expressed emotion is not so much of a problem in developing countries
- 8.4 Cognitive Perspective
- Difficulty in attention, inhibition and communication skills lead them to reserve resources (withdraw)
- Delusions – Person tries to make sense of perceptual experiences
- Hallucinations – Perceptual hypersensitivity
- Negative symptoms – Expectations about social interactions à withdraw in order not to stress out more
à cognitive therapy helps to identify and cope with stressful events and dispute psychotic symptoms,
create expectations of positive outcomes (against negative symptoms)
- 8.5 Cross-Cultural Perspective
- Most cultures have biological explanation
- Also spiritual and family explanations
9.0 Treatment
- 9.1 Biological Treatment
- Medications (insulin coma therapy, 1930, not used anymore)
- Brain surgery (not used anymore)
- Electroconvulsive ECT
- 1950 Antipsychotic drugs = Neuroleptics (eg. Chlorpromazine)Typical Antipsychotics:
- Chlorpromazine: Calm agitation, antipsychotic, others (trifluoperazine, thioridazine, phenazine)
à Block dopamine receptors. Can control positive symptoms
- Butyrophenone: no explanation given
- Thioxanthenes: no explanation givenà 25% of people do not respons to these, if they help, people still are dysfunctional, high relapse rate 78-98%
à side effects: grogginess, dry motugh, blurred vision, drooling, sexual dysfunction, visual problems, weight gain/lo
ss, constipation, menstrual problems, depression, akinesia: slowed motor movement, speech, expressionless face,
Parkinson similar symptoms, akathesis: agitation leads to uncontrolled movements
tardive dyskinesia: involuntary movement of facial features (tongue, mouth, face, jaw)Atypical Antipsychotics:
- Clozapine: Binds to D4 dopamine receptor, reduces negative + positive symptoms
- Risperidone: na
- Olanazapine: na
- Ziprasidone: naà side effects: dizziness, nausea, sedation, seizues, hypersalivation, weight gain, tachycardia,
agranulocytosis: deficiency of granulocytes à higher infection rate
concentration problems
- 9.2 Psychological and Social Treatment
- Increase social skills à reduce isolation, apathy, stress, risk of relapse9.2.1 Behavioral, Cognitive, Social Treatments
- Cognitive Treatment: Recognize and change beliefs
- Behavioral Treatment: Operant conditioning, modelling of right and socially desired behaviour
à Token economies
- Social interventions: Self-help support groups, roleplaying, discussion, relief9.2.2 Family Therapy
- Teach family about causes, symptoms, medications of schizophrenia – basic education
- Teach them communication + problem solving skills + behavioural techniques to teach the ill person
à highly decrease relapse rate combined with drugs
!!!! Cultural background needs to be considered !!!!9.2.3 Assertive Community Treatment programs
- Community mental health movement
à Tries to deinstitutionalize care, reintegrate ill in society/family à fail cause no funding
- Provide allround service, 24/7
- Homebased treatment helps reduce relapse or need for institutional care.9.2.4 Traditional Healers:
- Spiritual rituals, herbes.
- Explanations of affectiveness:
1. Structural model: Interrelated levels of experience, cognition, body, emotion
à Symptoms when these are disbalanced
2. Social support model: Conflicting social situations are reason
à Tries to motivate social circle to carry
3. Persuasive model: Rituals can change the meaning of the illness for person
4. Clinical model: Placebo effect, faith in the healers ways
Eating Disorders
9.4 Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorders. 1
9.6 Theorie of Eating Disorders. 2
9.6.2 Sociocultural and Psychological Factors. 2
9.7 Treatment for Eating Disorders. 2
9.1 Anorexia Nervosa
- Selfstarvation
- Cognitions: Need lose more weight, Distorted bodyimage, fear of gaining weight
- Chronically fatigued
- Begins in adolescence, duration 7 years female, 3 years male
- Comorbid (anxiety, depression, suicidal, impulsive) à more for binge/purge type than restricting
- Consequences: Cardiovascular problems, bradycardia (slowing of heartrate), arrhythmia (irregular heart beat)
Heart failure, expansion of stomach, Bone weakness (due to lack of estrogen), immune. Sys. Probs)
- Hypothalamus, Serotonie, Dopamine, + hormones mulfunctioning
Restricting type: no purging behaviours or binge eating, weightloss only due to exercise/fasting
Binge/purge type: involved in binge eating and purging (Defining feature to bulimia nervosa: below healthy weight
Amenorrhea: Menstrual periods stop
9.2 Bulimia Nervosa
- Uncontrolled eating bingeing followed by purging (to prevent weight gain)
- Still kind of normal bodyweight or even too much
- 114+ episodes per week
- Amounts of food larger than circumstances require
- Selfevaluation heavily influenced on body image
- Begins in adolescence, is chronic à 15 years
- Consequences: Electrolyte imbalance from fluid loss (from purging) à heart failures
- Serotonin related
9.3 Binge-Eating Disorder
- Does not engage in purging behaviour very often to compensate
- Significantly overweight
- Cognitions: Disgusted by themselves, ashamed
- Comorbid: Depression, anxiety, substance abuse, personality disorders
- Duration from 814 years
- 2 subtypes: dieting subtype (maintain strict diet besides bingeing)
Depressive subtype (eat to quell emotions, are depressed, low self-esteem)
9.4 Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorders
Partial Syndrome: Does not meet full criteria for anorexia or bulimia nervosa (e.g. fewer binges)
Highly concerned and judgemental about their weight
Show psychological problems at age 20 (90%)
Atypical anorexia nervosa: Meets all symptoms but bodyweight is normal or above
Bulimia nervosa of low frequency/or limited duration: less than once a week and/or less than 3 months
Night eating disorder: Cravings after dinner in the night, lack of control of eating, begins in adolescence + chronic
Not sleep-eating, (unconscious eating during sleep)
9.5 Obesity
- Risk factor to development of mental disorders
- Result of using of antipsychotic drugs (psychotropic drugs)
- BMI over 30
- Consequences: Coronary heart disease, hypertension, stroke, type 2 diabetes, cancer.
- Caused by environment (toxic food, fast food, refined food) and lack of physical activity
- Prevention: Eat nutrientdense food, 30 min sports per day, healthy environment, healthy mindset.
Bariatric surgery: Used over BMI 40. Bypass, food intake is limited.
9.6 Theorie of Eating Disorders
9.6.1 Biological factors
- Heritability ca 50%
- Runs in families
- Hormone changes during puberty
- Hypothalamus (regulates eating, receives messages about food consumption and controls further intake)
- Neurotransmitter malfunction (serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine
- Hormones (cortisol, insulin)
9.6.2 Sociocultural and Psychological Factors
- Media Pressure, peer pressure (worse than media pressure)
- Some sports that are weightdependent or aesthetic
Cognitive factors: Low-selfesteem, perfectionism, concerned with opinion of others, dichotomous thinking style
Emotion Regulation Difficulties: Maladaptive way of coping with negative emotions à emotional eating to feel
Better.
Family Dynamics: Parents are onvercontrolling, do not allow expression of negative emotions
- low parental warmth, high demands
Children cannot separate from their parents à food intake gives them control
9.7 Treatment for Eating Disorders
9.7.1 Psychotherapy
Anorexia:
- Difficult to engage them in therapy, cause they value their thinness
- CBT: Confront overevalutation of thinness, rewards for weightgains, relaxation techniques
- Family therapy: Parents take control of weight and child can get it back by eating healthy
Bulimia + Bingeing
- CBT: Confront cognitions about weight and shape of body, teach healthy food intake schedules (36 months)
- Interpersonal Therapy: Adresses problems with relationships (nondirective)
- Supportiveexpressive psychodynamic therapy: talk about problems (especially relationships)
- Behavioural: reinforcement of food intake, monitor food intake, coping techniques to avoid bingeing
9.7.2 Biological Therapy
- SSRI (bulimia)
- Antidepressants (anorexia)
- Olanzapine (antipsychotic drug, sideeffect: Restore weight)
Index
Stress, Coping, Adjustment and Health. 1
16.1 Models of the Personality and effect on Stress and Health. 1
7.2.2 Role of Positive Emotions. 4
7.2.3 Management of Emotions. 4
7.3 Type A and D Personality and Cardiovascular Disease. 4
Stress, Coping, Adjustment and Health
- How can psychology change people´s risk behaviours?
- Leading causes of death are not disease, but lifestylefactors (smoking, stress, sports, emotions)
Health Psychology: Study how stable behavioural and psychological factors (e.g. personality) affect health
- Personalities that are unassertive, emotionally inhibited, aggressive, hostile are prone to disease
Stress: Subjective reaction produced by an event that feels uncontrollable or threatening (lack of resources)
16.1 Models of the Personality and effect on Stress and Health
- Models are not mutually exclusive: They may overlap ect..
- Personality traits of conscientiousness, positive emotionality, low hostility, low neuroticism, high competence (efficiency) = best predictors of health
Interactional model: Personality influences relationship between stress and illness
Limitation: Coping responses are not consistently adaptive or maladapitve
Transactional model: Personality has 3 effects: 1. Influences exposure to certain events
2. Influences interpretation or appraisal of event
Called transactional because there is a transaction between persons influence on events and appraisal of this event. |
3. Influences coping. Interactional model
Health behaviour model: Does not directly influence stress and illness, but indirectly by engaging in health-
Promoting behaviours (e.g sports, visiting the doc)
Predisposition model: Personality and illness are influenced by underlying causes (e.g. genes)
Third variable (confound) influences the others (e.g. enhanced sympathetic nervous system activity might cause both.
Illness behaviour model: Focuses on the actions that people take when they think they have an illness.
- E.g. Neuroticism personality tends to just complain instead of going to doc.
7.1 The Concept of Stress
Stressors: Events that cause stress
- 1. Produce feeling of being overwhelmed (intensity)
2. Outside of power of influence – uncontrollable
3. Produce opposing tendencies: wanting or not wanting an object or activity or (person)
à defined by appraisal of person: (subjective cognitive response)
Primary appraisal: This is a threat to my personal goals
Secondary appraisal: I do not have the resources
7.1.4 Varieties of Stress
Acute stress: sudden onset of demands (stress in the here and now)
Episodic acute stress: recurrent episodes of acute stress that are expected
Traumatic stress: High intensity acute stress, effects last for years or lifetime. Hardcore symptoms à PTSD
Chronic stress: Stress does not end à leads to serious systematic illness (diabetes, cardiovascular, immune sys.)
7.1.1 Stress Response
- Pattern of emotional and physiological reactions (fight or flight + sympathetic nervous system increase)
General adaption syndrome (GAS): Caused by constant exposure to stressors
3 Stages: 1. Alarm stage: Fight or flight response + sympathetic NS activation (also peripheral NS)
2. Resistance stage: Stressor continues for a longer period. Body uses resources to cope on above average consumption
3. Exhaustion stage: Physiological resources depleted à illness
7.1.2 Major Life Events
- Highly stressfull events to which people have to adjust their way of life.
- Researcher made a list of most stressful events.
- Most stressful events score high on the 3 factors of stressors (intensity, conflict, uncontrollability)
- Research: More stressors = higher likelihood of developing a cold
7.1.3 Daily Hassles
- Chronic and repetitive stressors (weekendjob, studying psychology, deadlines)
- Negative cognitions such as worry about weight, little things ect.
- Do not evoke the GAS Syndrome
7.2 Coping Strategies
7.2.1 Attributional Style
- How do people explain the events happening to them?
- 3 dimensions: stable vs unstable
Internal vs external
Specific vs global
CAVE technique: Analysing publications in terms of the 3 dimensions
Dispositional optimism: Expectation that good events will happen in the future and bad events will be rare
- Focus on expectation on explanation
- Optimistic bias: Perceive to be at lower risk than the true risk actually is.
- Higher likelihood for posttraumatic growth (reevaluation of life after serious event + more happiness and health after this event
Self-efficacy: Belief that one has the resources/ability to deal with the problem at hand and achieve the goals
7.2.2 Role of Positive Emotions
- Positive emotions are beneficial to stress because: 1. Sustain coping efforts
2. provide break from stress
3. give time to restore resources and social relationship
- Broaden and build model: Positive emotions broaden narrowed perspective and help to build social relationships and restore resources
- Positive emotions after stress help regeneration
- 3 positive emotion coping strategies: 1. Positive reappraisal: focus on the good things (opportunites)
2. Problem focused coping: Think and act to deal with the cause of the stressor. Or the things they can control
3. Creating positive events: Humour, watch youtube motivation
à research field of positive Psychology: focus on what influences us positively instead of negatively
7.2.3 Management of Emotions
Emotional inhibition: Hold anxiety and emotions inside. Psychoanalysts think this is major reason for illness
- Inhibition causes increased physiological arousal due to effort
- Worse interpersonal relationships, insecure, lower level of well-being
- Brain area involved: Prefrontral cortex. Planning, executive control
- Correlates with: low relationship satisfaction and low commitment, high conflict.
!!!! When chronic: chronic sympathetic NS arousal à increased likelihood of cardiovascular disease & other. !!!!
7.2.4 Disclosure
- Sharing private aspects of ones life with someone. Like emotional inhibition: Takes effort to keep it inside.
à Enclosure leads to depression, anxiety, disease, Social relationships withdraw (cause they feel rejected)
- Works because: Relieves from tension of keeping it inside. Allows reinterpretation/understanding. Eventually also habituation (to the emotional response). Change representation of even in persons mind.
Writing paradigm: Writing is like talking. Just put it out somewhere and the stress goes away.
- The more the better (also talking)
- Associated with objective and subjective well-being
7.3 Type A and D Personality and Cardiovascular Disease
Type A: Syndrome that consists of 3 traits:
- Competitive achievement motivation: need competition
- Time urgency: Sense of wasting time
- Hostility: Become frustrated and aggressive when blocked from their goal (independent and most defining trait for cardiov. Dis. ) à leads to inflammation of arteries by elevating leukocytes (white blood cells)
Arteriosclerosis: Slow blocking of arteries, /through fat and cholesterol. May lead
to heart attack, tear on the walls of the arteries.
Type D: Distressed personality: 2 traits
- Negative affectivity: tendency to experience frequent negative emotions
- Social inhibition: not share emotions and thoughts or worry in social situations (evaluation fear)
- Have exaggerated stress resonse (more cortisol, thus inflammation) à risk increases for disease
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Summary Personality, Clinical and Healthpsychology
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