A01: Diagnosis & Classification of Sz

Cards (14)

  • Diagnosis & Classification of Schizophrenia:
    • Prevalence
    • Diagnosis vs Classification
    • Classification: DSM-5 and ICD-10 differ
    • Symptoms/diagnosis: + & -
  • Who is most likely to suffer from Sz/prevalence?
    A serious mental disorder affecting about 1% of the population suffer from SZ.
    • More Males suffer from SZ
    • More likely to affect city-dwellers
    • More likely to affect lower socio-economic groups (working people)
  • Diagnosis vs Classification?
    Diagnosis and classification are interlinked.
    To diagnose a specific disorder, we need to be able to distinguish one disorder from another.
    • Classification - identity symptoms that go together = a disorder
    • Diagnosis - identify symptoms and use classification system to identify the disorder (e.g. depression, OCD, schizophrenia etc).
  • How is SZ classified?
    • DSM-5 (APA's Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)
    • ICD-10/11 (WHO's The International Classification of Diseases)
    DSM-5 and ICD-10 differ
  • There are 2 main classification systems in use:
    DSM-5: One positive symptom must be present
    • Needs one of the so called positive sumptoms to be present for diagnosis
    • Subtypes removed
    • Positive symptoms = delusions, hallucinations or speech disorganisation
    ICD-10: (V11 published but not used for diagnosis until 2022): 2 or more negative symptoms are sufficient for diagnosis
    • 2 or more negative symptoms adequate for diagnosis
    • 5 subtypes recognised
    • Negative symptoms = Avolition & speech poverty
  • Symptoms of schizophrenia:
    • Positive
    • Negative
  • Hallucinations
    • Unusual sensory experiences that have no basis in reality or distorted perceptions of real things/distortions of stimuli that are genuinely there - unreal perceptions of the env
    • Experienced in relation to any sense
    • For example, hearing voices or seeing people who are not there
    4 Types:
    • Tactile Hallucinations (related to touch e.g bugs crawling under skin)
    • Visual Hallucinations (related to vision e.g seeing lights, faces, objects)
    • Auditory Hallucinations (related to hearing e.g. hearing voices)
    • Olfactory Hallucinations (related to smell e.g smell things)
  • Delusions
    • + symptom
    • Irrational beliefs that have no basis in reality and can take a range of forms - make a person with schizophrenia behave in ways that make sense to them but are bizarre to others.
    • Belief which seems real to the person but is not.
    • For example, beliefs about being a very important person or the victim of a conspiracy.
    Types:
    • Delusions of Paranoia (aka delusions of persecution)
    • Delusions of Control
    • Delusions of Grandeur
  • Disordered Thinking/ speech disorganisation
    • + symptom
    • Concentration problems means sufferers struggle to maintain their train of though
    • Jumbled sentences
    • Side tracked:
    • Tangents
    • Tangential Speech
    • Incoherent speech
    • Racing thoughts
  • Negative Symptoms
    These symptoms involve the 'loss' of usual abilities and experiences
    • Speech poverty
    • Avolition
  • Speech Poverty
    • Characterised by changes in pattern of speech: Reduction in amount & quality of speech. May include delay in verbal responses during conversion.
    • DSM emphasises speech disorganisation & incoherence as a positive symptom.
    • Characteristics:
    • ALOGIA: where speech seems 'blocked'
    • ECHOLALIA: meaningless repetition of words
    • NEOLOGISMS: new words
    • WORD SALADS: jumble of words
    • Communication suffer from AFFECTIVE FLATTENING: where there reduction in range & intensity of emotions/emotional expression (Blank face, no expression, monotone, lacks body language & no eye contact)
  • Avolition

    • Sometimes known as apathy
    • Lack of purposeful willed behaviour
    • Severe loss of motivation to carry out everyday tasks
    • Results in lowered activity & unwillingness to carry out goal-directed behaviours.
    Characteristics:
    • Lack of self care (e.g. poor personal grooming)
    • Lack of energy (e.g tiredness)
    • Lack of motivation/goal directed behaviour (often to carry out everyday tasks e.g. hobbies, personal care, work)
  • Catatonic
    Need to repeat behaviours
  • Positive Symptoms
    These symptoms are 'additional' experiences beyond those of ordinary existence.
    • Hallucinations
    • Delusions
    • Speech Disorganisation