SCHIZOPHRENIA, Resume
SCHIZOPHRENIA, Resume
SCHIZOPHRENIA, Resume
B. Acute Psychotic
Diagnostic criteria:
A. Presence of one (or more) of the following symptoms. At least one of these
must be (1), (2), or (3)
1. Dellusions
2. Hallucinations
3. Disorganized speech (eg., frequent derailment or incoherence)
4. Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior
B. Duration of an episode of the disturbance is at least 1 day but less than 1
month, with eventual full return to premorbid level of functioning
C. The disturbance is not better explained by major depressive or bipolar episode
with psychotic features or another psychotic disorder such as schizophrenia or
catatonia, and is not attributable to the psychological effects of a substance
(eg., a drug of abuse, a medication) or another medical condition.
C. Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a clinical syndrome of variable, but profoundly disruptive,
psychopathology that involves cognition, perception, and other aspect of behavior.
The expression of these manifestations varies across patient and over time, but the
effect illness is always severe and is usually long lasting. The disorder generally
begins before age 25, persists throughout life, and affects persons of all social
classes. Both patient and their families often suffer from poor care and social
ostracism because of widespread ignorance about the disorder.
D. Schizoaffektive disorder
Schizoaffective disorder has features of both schizophrenia and mood disorders
Diagnostic Criteria:
A. An uninterrupted period of illness during which there is a major mood
episode (major depressive or manic) concurrent with criterion of
schizophrenia (delusions; hallucinations; disorganized speech e.g., frequent
derailment or incoherence, grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior;
negative symptoms i.e., diminished emotional espression or avoliton)
B. Delusions or hallucinations for 2 or more weeks in the absence of a major
mood episode (depressive or manic) during the life-time duration of the
illness
C. Symptoms that meet criteria for a major mood episode are present for the
majority of the total duration of the active and residual portions of the
illness
D. The disturbance is not attributable to the effects of a substance (eg., a drug
of abuse, a medication) or another medical condition
4. The gigantocellular neurons of the reticular excitatory area and the acetylcholine
system.
The gigantocellular neurons (the giant cells) in the reticular excitatory area of
the pons and mesencephalon. The fibers from these large cells divide immediately
into two branches, one passing upward to the higher levels of the brain and the other
passing downward through the reticulospinal tracts into the spinal cord. The
neurohormone secreted at their terminals is acetylcholine. In most places, the
acetylcholine functions as an excitatory neurotransmitter. Activation of these
acetylcholine neurons leads to an acutely awake and excited nervous system.
5. Other Neurotransmitters and Neurohormonal Substances Secreted in the Brain.
Without describing their function, the following is a partial list of still other
neurohormonal substances that function either at specific synapses or by release into
the fluids of the brain: enkephalins, gamma-aminobutyric acid, glutamate,
vasopressin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, α-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-
MSH), neuropeptide-Y= (NPY), epinephrine, histamine, endorphins, angiotensin II,
and neurotensin. Thus, there are multiple neurohormonal systems in the brain, the
activation of each of which plays its own role in controlling a different quality of
brain function
3. Neuropathology
In the 19th century, neuropatologists failed to find a neuropathological
basis for schizophrenia, and thus they classified schizophrenia as functional
disorder. By the end of the 20th century, however, researchers had made
significant strides in revealing a potential neuropathological or neurochemical
abnormalities in the cerebral cortex, the thalamus,a nd the brainstem. The loss
of brain volume widely reported in schizophrenic brains appears to result from
reduced density of the axons, dendrites, and synapses that mediate associative
functions of the brain.
Limbic System. Because of its role in controlling emotions, the limbic
system has been hypothesized to be involved in the pathophysiology of
schizophrenia. Studies of postmortem brain samples from schizophrenia
patient have shown a decrease in the size of the region including the
amgydala, the hippocampus, and the parahippocampus gyrus. This
neuropathological finding agrees with the observation made by magnetic
resonance imaging studies of patients with schizophrenia. The Hippocampus is
not only smaller in size in schizophrenia, but is also functionally abnormal as
indicated by disturbances in glutamate transmission. Disorganization of the
neurons within the hippocampus of schizophrenia patient has also been
reported.
Prefrontal Cortex. There is considerable evidence from postmortem
brain studies that supports anatomical abnormalities in the perfrontal cortex in
schizophrenia. Functional deficits in the prefrontal brain imaging region have
also been demonstrated. It has long been noted that several symptoms of
schizophrenia mimic those found in persons with prefrontal lobotomies or
frontal lobe syndromes.
Thalamus. Some studies of the thalamus show evidence of volume
shrinkage or neuronal loss, in particular subnuclei. The medial dorsal nucles of
thalamus, which has reciprocal connection with prefrontal cortex, has been
reported ro contain a reduced a number of neurons. The total number of
neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes is reduced by 30 to 45 percent in
schizophrenia patients. This putative finding does not appear to be due to the
effects of antipsychotics drugs because the volume of the thalamus is simillar
in size between schizophrenic treated chronically with medication and
neuroleptic-naive subjects.
1. How about the epidemiology and Prevalence of schizophrenia?
In the united states, the lifetime prevalence of schizophrenia is about 1 percent, which
means that about 1 person in 100 will develop schizophrenia during their lifetime. The
epidemiologic catchment area study sponsored by the national institute of mental health
reported a lifetime prevalence of 0.6 – 1.9 percent. According to DSM-IV-TR, the annual
incidence of schizophrenia ranges from 0.5 – 5.0 per 10.000, with some geographic
variation (e.g., the incidence is higher for persons born in urban area of industrialized
nations). Schizophrenia is found in all societies and geographical areas, and incidence and
prevalence rates are roughly equal worldwide. In the United states, about 0.05 percent of
the total population is treated for schizophrenia in any single year, and only about half of
all patients with schizophrenia obtain treatment, despite the severity of the disorder.
Perceptual Disturbance
Hallucinations. Any of the five senses may be affected by hallucinatory
experiences in patients with schizophrenia. The most common
hallucinations, however, are auditory, with voices that are often threatening,
obscene, accusatory, or insulting. Visual hallucinations are common, but
tactile, olfactory and gustatory hallucinations are unusual.
Genesthetic Hallucinations. Genesthetic Hallucinations are unfounded
sensations of altered states in bodily organs. Examples of Genesthetic
Hallucinations include a burning sensation in the brain, a pushing sensatiojn
in the blood vessels and a cutting sensation in the bone marrow.
Illusions. As differentiated from hallucinations, whereas illusions are
distortions of real images or sensations, hallucinations are not based on real
images or sensations.
Thought
Disorder of thought are the most difficult symptoms for many clinicians and
students to understand, but they may be the core symptoms of schizophrenia.
Disorders of thought content reflect the patient’s ideas, beliefs, and
interpretations of stimuli. Delusions, the most obvious example of a disorder
of thought content, are varied in schizophrenia and may assume persecutory,
grandiose, religious, or somatic forms. Patients may believe that an outside
entity controls their thoughts or b behavior or,
conversely, that they control outside events in an extraordinary fashion (such
as causing the sun to rise and set or by preventing earthquakes). Patients
may have an intense and consuming preoccupation with esoteric, abstract,
symbolic, psychological, or philosophical ideas. Patients may also worry
about allegedly life-threatening but bizarre and implausible somatic
conditions, such as the presence of aliens inside the patient’s testicles
affecting his ability to father children. The phrase loss of ego boundaries
describes the lack of a clear sense of where the patient’s own body, mind
and influence end and where those of other animate and inanimate objects
begin. For example, patients may think that other persons, the television, or
the newspapers are referring to them (ideas of reference). Other symptoms
of the loss of ego boundaries include the sense that the patient has physically
fused with an outside object (e.g., a tree or another person) or that the patient
has disintegrated and fused with the entire universe (cosmic identity). With
such a state of mind, some patients with schizophrenia doubt their gender or
their sexual orientation. These symptoms should not be confused with
transvestism, transsexuality, or other gender identity problems.
Hospitalization
Hospitalization is indicated for diagnostic purposes; for stabilization of medications; for
patients’ safety because of suicidal or homicidal ideation; and for grossly disorganized or
inappropriate behavior, including the inability to take care of basic needs such as food,
clothing, and shelter. Establishing an effective association between patients and
community support systems is also a primary goal of hospitalization.
Classification
Typical antipsychotics
The typical antipsychotics block dopamine, muscarinic cholinergic, α-adrenergic,
and H1-histaminergic receptors.
The dopamine antagonism is believed to produce the antipsychotic effect. It also produces
some endocrinological effects. Remember that dopamine inhibits prolactin release. Thus,
an antagonist at the dopamine receptor results in an increase in prolactin release. This in
turn leads to lactation. Most of the neuroleptics, except thioridazine, have antiemetic
effects that are mediated by blocking D2 receptors of the chemoreceptor trigger zone in
the medulla.
All of these drugs produce extrapyramidal effects, including parkinsonism, akathisia,
and tardive dyskinesia. The extrapyramidal effects of these drugs are presumably caused
by blocking of dopamine receptors in the striatum (basal ganglia). Extrapyramidal effects
include acute dystonia (spasm of the muscles of the face, tongue, neck, and back),
akathisia (motor restlessness), and parkinsonism (rigidity, tremor, and shuffling gait).
Because it is irreversible, one of the most worrisome extrapyramidal effects is tardive
dyskinesia. Tardive dyskinesia may appear during or after prolonged ther- apy with any of
these drugs. It involves stereotyped involuntary movements, such as lip smacking, jaw
movements, and darting of the tongue. Purposeless quick movements of the limbs may
also occur.
The more potent drugs produce more extrapyramidal effects. Conversely, the drugs
with more anticholinergic potency have fewer extrapyramidal effects (Figure 19–1).
Compare this to what we know about Parkinson disease. In Parkinson disease, a loss of
dopamine neurons leads to a movement disorder that can be treated with anticholinergics.
Here, we are using drugs to block dopamine receptors, which you may predict will lead to
parkinsonism (symptoms that are similar to Parkinson disease, but not caused by a loss of
neurons). Drugs with anticholinergic actions cause fewer extrapyramidal effects
because the dopamine– acetylcholine balance in the motor systems is less affected.
Atypical antipsychotics
The second-generation antipsychotics also block muscarinic, α1-adrenergic, serotonin,
and histamine receptors in addition to dopamine and serotonin receptors.
Although referred to as a serotonin-dopamine antagonist, each agent in this class has a
unique combination of receptor affinities. At the very least you should know that these
drugs are antagonists at dopamine and 5-HT2A receptors. The affinities for the other
receptors determine the side-effect profile. This is the type of information that you can add
later. The ability of these drugs to reduce the negative features of psychosis (withdrawal,
flat affect, anhedonia, catatonia) and the positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions,
disordered thought, agitation) has led to the use of these drugs in a wide variety of
patients.
Clozapine has caused fatal agranulocytosis. In patients receiving clozapine, monitoring of
the white cell count needs to be done on a regular basis. Agranulocytosis does not appear
to be a problem with the newer agents in this class.
RISPERIDONE is the drug of choice for new onset schizophrenia.
What is the prognosis of Schizophrenia ?