involuntary, vivid experiences, which occur in the absence of any external stimuli
what is a delusion?
fixed beliefs, which are not amendable to change in the light of conflicting evidence.
what is thought insertion?
when a person believes that thoughts do not belong to them and have been implanted by an external source
what is an example of a negative symptom?
social withdraw
what is an example of a negative symptom?
flatness of emotion
what is an example of a negative symptom?
lack of energy and apathy
the dopamine hypothesis
hyperdopaminergia occurs in the mesolimbic pathway
the dopamine hypothesis
hyperdopaminergia is where there is abnormally high dopamine levels.
what does hyperdopaminergia cause
it causes for the neurons using dopamine to fire too often, transmitting too many messages
what does hyperdopaminergia cause?
positive symptoms
the dopamine hypothesis
hypodopaminergia is in the mesocortical pathway
the dopamine hypothesis
hypodopaminergia is where the dopamine levels are abnormally low
what does hypodopaminergia lead to
negative symptoms
the genetic explanation, DISC1
people with abnormality to this gene are 1.4x more likely to develop schizophrenia
what is the purpose of the DICS1 gene?
it codes for the creation of gaba, which regulates neurotransmitters such as glutamate and dopamine
what happens in the absence of the DISC1 gene?
there will be an excess of dopamine in the brain
the genetic explanation, COMT
provided instruction for the creation of an enzyme which breaks down neurotransmitters such as dopamine in the pre-frontal cortex
what does deletion of the COMT gene result in?
dopamine levels are poorly regulated
the genetic explanation, C4
abnormal synaptic pruning can be a result of the altered expression of the C4 gene
the genetic explanation, synaptic pruning
abnormal synaptic pruning in adolescence can, leading to a shortage of connection between neurons can lead to schizophrenia
the genetic explanation, C4
overexpression of the C4 gene has been identified in schizophrenic patients
family dysfunction, double bind theory
suggests that a child receives mixed messages and feels unable to do the correct thing, leading to the development of schizophrenia
family dysfunction, double bind theory
Bateson suggested that children who frequently receive contradictory messages from their parents develop schizophrenia
family dysfunction, high expressed emotion
this is a family communication style which involves criticism, hostility and emotional overinvolvement
family dysfunction, high expressed emotion
can cause a relapse in schizophrenia, and can maintain it
drug treatments, antipsychotics
aim to change the balance of neurochemicals to address the change in behaviour
drug treatments, typical-antipsychotics
these arrest the dopamine production by blocking D2 receptors in synapses which absorb dopamine, they work in the mesolimbic pathway
drug treatments, typical-antipsychotics
result in the reduction of positive symptoms
drug treatments, atypical-antipsychotics
blocking dopamine receptors in the same way as typical-antipsychotics, but they also act on serotonin and glutamate receptors, blocking them.
drug treatments, atypical-antipsychotics
reduce positive and negative symptoms
family therapy
as family dysfunction can increase the risk of relapse into schizophrenia, family therapy aims to improve the home situation of the person with schizophrenia
family therapy
is family centred, aiming to change the behaviour of the family
family therapy
the first stage is psychoeducation, this is where the family is educated on the symptoms of schizophrenia in order for them to be more understanding
family therapy
stage two is preliminary analysis, this is done through interview and observation, the therapist will identify the strengths and weaknesses of the family
family therapy
information transfer is the third stage, teaching the patient and the family facts about the illness.
family therapy aims to
reduce conflict, by addressing anger within the family