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Introduction to Schizophrenia Class notes Neuroscience And Behaviour (C28NAB)

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Introduction to Schizophrenia Class notes Neuroscience And Behaviour (C28NAB). Brain, neurochemistry, theories of Schizophrenia, symptoms of Schizophrenia, history of Schizophrenia

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Uploaded on
January 21, 2021
Number of pages
4
Written in
2018/2019
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Class notes
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Paula moran
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Lecture 3 to 4

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March 21, 2018
Introduction to Schizophrenia

≈ Schizophrenia history:
– 1851- Falvet “Folie circulaire”
– 1871- Hecker “hebephrenia”
– 1878 - Kraeplin –combined into single disease- “dementia Praecox”
 used the term dementia praecox. “Dementia” - global disruption of perceptual
and cognitive processes. “Praecox” - the early adulthood onset
 First to describe illness as progressive with no return to premorbid
functioning
– 1908 - Bleuler schizophrenia-split between affect and thought
 Reformulated dementia Praecox
 term schizophrenia “schizo” meaning split and “phrene” meaning mind
 Characterised fragmented thinking. Breakdown of integrated functions that
co-ordinate thought affect and behaviour
– 1959 - Schneider-first rank symptoms

≈ Symptoms of schizophrenia:
– Positive symptoms:
 Delusion: false belief despite evidence to contrary (persecutory/paranoid,
control, grandiose, reference)
 Bizarre delusion (thought insertion, thought withdrawal, thought
broadcasting, made actions)
 Hallucination: perceptual experience seems real in the absence of physical
proof (not an illusion/distortion of senses)- most common auditory, visual,
olfactory
 Thought disorders: inventing words, having trouble understanding common
words, changing topic frequently)
– Negative symptoms:
 Affect: Blunted affect, mood or emotional state, limited range of emotions,
 Anhedonia: inability to feel pleasure
 Thought (cognitive symptoms):
 Avolition (unable to begin tasks, lack of motivation)
 Alogia (unable to speak)
 Problems with working memory, planning, learning
– Liddle (1987):
 Re-examined the positive negative dichotomy
 Factor analytic study 40 patients with chronic schizophrenia
 Confirmed positive and negative dichotomy + third factor “disorganisation
syndrome” which Crow and others attributed to the positive dimension
 Identified three syndrome categories:
1. Psychomotor poverty (poverty of speech, decreased spontaneous
movement, blunted affect)
2. Reality distortion (delusions, hallucinations)
3. Disorganisation syndrome (inappropriate affect, distractibility, poverty of
content of speech, thought disturbances)
 Liddle (2002) expanded to include 5 factors: 1) psychomotor poverty 2)
reality distortion 3) Disorganisation 4) psychomotor excitation 5) anxiety
/depression
– The presence of symptoms vary in people; have some symptoms and not others
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