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Psychotic Disorders

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Title: Psychotic Disorders


1
Psychotic Disorders
  • DSM-IV

2
Psychosis
  • Psychosis is a condition characterized by a loss
    of contact with reality.
  • Hallucinations false perceptions
  • Delusions false beliefs

3
Examples of Hallucinations and Delusions
  • Hallucinations
  • Hearing voices
  • Seeing visions
  • Experiencing odd tastes, smells
  • Experiencing odd feelings
  • Delusions
  • Persecution
  • Grandeur
  • Somatic
  • Jealousy
  • Erotomania
  • Thought control
  • Behavior control
  • Thought withdrawal

4
Some Recent Cases
  • Ted Kaczynski--the unabomber
  • Mark David Chapman--killed John Lennon
  • John Hinckley--shot President Reagan
  • Andrea Yates--drowned her five children
  • John Nashthe subject of the movie A Beautiful
    Mind
  • Note most schizophrenics are not violent

5
Ted Kaczynski the unabomber
  • Taught mathematics at UC Berkeley

6
Mark David Chapman killed John Lennon
  • Diagnosed as Schizophrenic.

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Andrea Yates after she was arrested
9
John Hinckley
  • Still in St. Elizabeths

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12
Heavens Gate Cult
  • Marshall Applewhite instructed his followers to
    kills themselves when the comet Hale-Bopp
    arrived. They were all dressed alike. UFO cult

13
Heavens Gate Cult
  • Doomsday cult centered in California. Founded in
    1975 by Marshall Applewhite Bonnie Nettles.
    They thought they were the Two Witnesses
    mentioned in the Book of Revelation. They lived
    communally in a large San Diego country home.
    Little contact with family or friends--even their
    own children. They dress in unisex clothing
    white shirts and black pants. They are required
    to be celibate. Eight of the male members along
    with Applewhite were willingly castrated. They
    believed this prepared them for the next level of
    existence, a life that would be free of gender,
    sexual identity, and sexual activity.
  • They followed a syncretistic religion combining
    elements of Christianity with unusual beliefs
    about the nature of UFOs. They interpreted
    passages from the four gospels and the Book of
    Revelation as referring to UFO visitation. They
    look at earth as being in control of the evil
    forces, and the group members see themselves as
    being among the elite who would attain heaven.
  • 21 women and 18 men committed suicide in 3 groups
    on 3 successive days. (He spent some time in
    Houston).

14
Psychoses may be caused by
  • Drugs e.g., LSD, Amphetamines, Cocaine
  • Brain Diseases e.g., Alzheimers Disease
  • Brain Injuries e.g., trauma, stroke
  • Extreme stress e.g., war, kidnapping,
  • Bipolar and major depressive disorders
  • Schizophrenia--most common cause

15
A few facts about schizophrenia
  • Usually diagnosed in late teens/early 20s
  • Means split mind Eugen Bleuler
  • Affects approximately 1 of people
  • Men have more severe cases
  • 10-15 commit suicide 1
  • More common among the poor

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Diagnosing Psychiatric Disorders
  • All psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia
    are diagnosed on the basis of clusters of
    symptoms.
  • There is no brain scan, no urine test, no blood
    test, no cerebral spinal fluid test that can be
    used to diagnose schizophrenia. There is no
    independent biological test at this time.

18
Positive and Negative Symptoms
  • Positive
  • Hallucinations
  • Delusions
  • Disordered speech
  • Bizarre behavior
  • Good response to drugs, normal brain ventricles,
    limbic system abnormalities
  • Negative
  • Emotionally flat
  • Poverty of speech
  • Associality
  • Apathy
  • Avolition
  • Frontal lobe abnormalities, enlarged ventricles,
    variable response to drugs

19
Positive Symptoms Type I
  • Delusions
  • Persecutory
  • Delusions of reference
  • Grandiose delusions
  • Delusions of thought insertion
  • Hallucinations
  • Disorganized Thought and Speech
  • Disorganized or Catatonic Behavior

Painting by schizophrenic patient
20
Negative Symptoms Type II
  • Flattened/Blunted affect
  • Severe reduction or absence of affect (mood,
    emotion)
  • Alogia
  • Severe reduction or absence of speech
  • Avolition
  • Inability to persist at common, goal-oriented
    tasks

21
Diagnostic Criteria for Schizophrenia (DSM IV)
  • Delusions
  • Hallucinations
  • Disorganized Speech
  • Disorganized or catatonic behavior
  • Negative Symptoms (deficits)
  • Two or more of the above must be present for at
    least one month and some disturbance for six
    months
  • Significant impairment in social/occupational
    functioning

22
Clinical Syndromes Schizophrenia
  • General symptoms
  • Delusions and irrational thought
  • Deterioration of adaptive behavior
  • Hallucinations
  • Disturbed emotions
  • Disorganized speech
  • Prognostic factors

23
Disorganized Speech
  • Disorder of thought form
  • Loose Associations
  • Thought derailment
  • Neologisms (making up words)
  • Word salad

24
Subtyping of Schizophrenia
  • 4 subtypes
  • Paranoid type
  • Catatonic type
  • Disorganized type
  • Undifferentiated type
  • New model for classification
  • Positive vs. negative symptoms

25
Etiology (Causal Factors)
  • No one factor can fully explain
  • Very good evidence for genetic transmission of a
    predisposition
  • Might be polygenic
  • Suspect chromosomes 22, 6, 8, and 1
  • Mutations early in development (see later slide)
  • Some evidence for other biological factors

26
Genetic Studies
  • Family studies risk increases as number of
    shared genes increases
  • Twin studies concordance rate higher in
    identical than fraternal twins
  • Adoption studies biological relatives show
    increased risk

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Other suggested causal factors
  • Prenatal viral infections, esp. 4 -7 month
  • Rh incompatibility between mother and baby
  • Early nutritional deficiencies
  • Birth complications

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Etiology of Schizophrenia, cont.
  • Genetic vulnerability
  • Neurochemical factors
  • Structural abnormalities of the brain
  • The neurodevelopmental hypothesis
  • Expressed emotion
  • Precipitating stress

31
Other Biological Aspects
  • Enlarged ventricles
  • 3 reduction in overall brain volume
  • Amygdala, frontal lobes, temporal lobes,
    hippocampus, thalamus
  • Most brains look normal
  • Dopamine
  • Glutamate (see below)

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Structural Brain Damage
  • Enlarged ventricles suggest deterioration /
    atrophy of brain tissue
  • Differences in volume, density, metabolic rate
  • Especially in pre-frontal cortex
  • Exist in individuals w/ family history of illness
    but no symptoms

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Neurotransmitters Role of Dopamine
  • Excess number of dopamine receptors
  • related to positive symptoms
  • Less dopamine activity in prefrontal cortex
  • associated with negative symptoms
  • Receptors in mesolimbic pathway
  • Atypical antipsychotics (e.g. clozapine) block
    action of dopamine in this system

37
The dopamine hypothesis as one explanation for
schizophrenia
38
Treatment
  • Antipsychotic medications
  • Thorazine (conventional, typical)
  • Tardive dyskinesia serious side effect
  • Clozaril (atypical)
  • Case Management
  • Family Therapy
  • Psychotherapy usually NOT appropriate

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41
Expressed Emotion
42
Where do schizophrenics end up?
43
Very Recent Drug Research
  • Worldwide sales for psychiatric drugs almost
    50 billion annually
  • Most antipsychotic drugs for schizophrenia target
    dopamine side effects can include diabetes,
    acne, weight gain, impotence, etc. Efficacy
    variable.
  • The newest drug research is targeting glutamate

44
Glutamate
  • People who use PhencyclidinePCP have
    hallucinations, delusions, etc., similar to
    schizophrenia
  • In 1979, researchers found that PCP blocked the
    release of glutamate at the glutamate receptors
    NMDA AMPA
  • These receptors seem to modify the amount of
    glutamate that cells released rather than simply
    turning circuits on and off (they fine- tune
    signals)

45
Glutamate cont.
  • Molecular biologists (1990s) discovered genes
    for 8 metabotropic glutamate receptors. Dr.
    Schoepp others tried to find chemicals that
    would either block or trigger the receptors
    selectively.
  • Dr. Moghaddam, at Yale, demonstrated that
    activating metabotropic glutamate receptors in
    rats could reverse the effects of PCP--providing
    proof that altering the path of glutamate
    transmission in the brain might relieve the
    symptoms of psychosis.

46
Glutamate competition begins
  • Dr. Schoepp then developed a drug and tried it on
    people in a clinical trial (at Eli
    Lilly-LY404039)) with relatively good success.
    Although slightly less effective than Zyprexa it
    had fewer side effects and seemed to improve
    cognitive symptoms. The next step is a larger
    clinical trial.
  • Competition among drug companies to find an
    effective drug that works on glutamate receptors
    is intensifying because this is a huge market.

47
Brand new genetic research(Science, March 28,
2008)
  • New gene-scanning technology detected extremely
    rare and unknown mutations that turned up 3 to 4
    times as often in schizophrenics as in those w/o
    it.
  • The genetics of schizophrenia appear to be more
    complex than thought.
  • The study was a collaboration of NIMH, the
    University of Washington, Seattle, and Cold
    spring Harbor Lab.

48
Science, 2008 cont.
  • Analyzed blood samples from 150 people with
    schizophrenia and 268 without.
  • Technique scans the entire human DNA map and look
    for rare variations. Some mutations are
    inherited others occur spontaneously during or
    near conception
  • 53 gene altering mutations were found and were
    concentrated in genes known to be involved in
    brain development.

49
Science, cont.
  • Mary-Claire King, a co-author, said the findings
    helped explain several facts about schizophrenia,
    including why genetic selection has not caused it
    to disappear. A constant influx of new mutations
    that occur purely by chance, out of the blue, can
    explain the persistence of schizophrenia in all
    parts of the world and throughout human history,
    Professor King said.

50
Science, cont.
  • One of the mutations identified in the study,
    for instance, distorts a protein that is involved
    in guiding neurons to their proper places during
    brain development. Another mutation that turned
    up changes the shape of a molecule that
    transports glutamate, a chemical that excites
    neurons and is heavily involved in transmitting
    signals between brain cells.

51
Science, reported in NYTimes
  • My dream, Dr. Sebat said, is that well do
    this kind of high-resolution analysis across tens
    of thousands of people and have full catalogs of
    variations that will tell us something not only
    about schizophrenia but about bipolar disorder,
    autism, depression, all of these disorders.
  • NYTimes, Friday, March 28, 2008

52
Conclusions
  • Schizophrenia affects about 1 of the worlds
    population and disables more people than any
    other physical or mental disorder.
  • The cost to society is enormous. Direct medical
    care in the U. S. is estimated to be 20 billion
    dollars per year (Torrey, 1995). Loss of
    productivity is incalculable.
  • There is excellent research going on in many
    areas-- neuroscience, genetics, molecular
    biology, psychology, pharmacology, and other
    areas. This is a challenging disorder, but we
    have every reason to be encouraged by the newest
    research findings.

53
DSM-IV-TR Psychotic Disorders
  • Schizophrenia 6 mos. of symptoms
  • 1-2 lifetime prevalence
  • Schizophreniform Disorder (1
  • Brief Psychotic Disorder (1 day -
  • Schizoaffective Disorder (schizo mood)
  • Delusional Disorder just delusion
  • islands of craziness
  • Shared Psychotic Disorder (folie a deux)
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