psychology - schizophrenia

    Cards (11)

    • 1% of the population suffers from schizophrenia
    • There is no difference in prevalence between males and females
    • Age of onset in males is late teens, early 20s
    • Age of onset in females is late 20s, early 30s
    • The 2 main classification systems is the DSM V and the ICD-10
    • 2 or more symptoms must be present for one or more months with reduced functioning for a diagnosis to be made
    • Positive symptoms are present in the schizophrenic but absent in healthy people
    • Negative symptoms are present in healthy people but absent in schizophrenics
    • Positive delusion examples - paranoid delusions 1. believing that you are being persecuted by others. 2. Grandeur. 3. Reference. 4. Thought insertion and broadcasting. 5. Hallucinations (auditory, visual and formication). 6. Disordered thinking
    • Negative symptoms examples - 1. apathy. 2. Flat effect. 3. Impaired social interaction. 4. Anhedonia. 5. Alogia. .6.Catatonic movement
    • Dopamine hypothesis - summary
      proposed by Van Rossum in 1967
      Schizophrenics brains produce more Dopamine
      Too much in the subcortical and Limbic regions may lead to positive symptoms
      Negative = less Dopamine
      Dopamine is a neurotransmitter which is a chemical messenger that sends signals between neurons
      Responsible for motivation and reward
      The link was developed from research into Parkinson's disease who were prescribed a L-Dopa drug.