Schizophrenia: Description, Etiology, And Treatment
About 1% to 2% of the U.S. population may suffer from schizophrenic disorders (Weiten, 2007; Rosenzweig, Breedlove, & Leiman, 2002). Usually emerging during adolescence or early adulthood and only infrequently after age 45, victims of schizophrenia usually evidence a history of peculiar behavior and of cognitive and social deficits. The onset of schizophrenia itself may be gradual or sudden, and once it emerges results of treatment vary. Some patients - approximately 15%-20% - have complete recovery; these likely have had milder symptoms (Weiten, 2007). Others experience a partial recovery intermittently receiving hospital care for the remainder of their lives. Whilst the third group of schizophrenic patients endures chronic illness that occasionally results in permanent hospitalization.
First publicized by Emil Kraeplin in his book Daementia praecox and aparaphrenia (1919), Kraeplin entitled schizophrenia dementia praecox, since he considered it a disorder that originated in adolescence and was genetic in origin. Its current appellation, schizophrenia, was invented by Eugene Bleuler in his monograph Dementia praecox: or, the group of Schizophrenias (1952). Schizophrenia itself means 'Split mind' or dissasociative thinking represented by Bleuler according to the four As: loosening of associations, autism (i.e. contrary to reality), affective disturbance, and ambivalence. These characteristics can be seen in the following quote extracted from a case history (adapted from Sheehan, 1982)
"Mick Jagger wants to marry me,… Mick Jagger is St. Nicholas and the Maharishi is Santa Claus. I want to form a gospel rock group called the Thorn Oil.. Teddy Kennedy cured me of my ugliness. I'm pregnant with the Son of God. Divorce isn't a piece of paper, it's a feeling, Forget about Zip Codes. I need shock treatments. The body is run by electricity. My wiring is all faulty (Sheehan 1982, pp, 104-105).
What you have here is an instance of dissociated thinking, shot through by delusions. Thinking is chaotic rather than logical and linear, and the person -- typical of schizophrenic individual -- shifts topics in disjointed ways.
Other symptoms include noticeable deteriorating of adaptive behavior in work, social relations, and personal care; hallucinations (most commonly, auditory; these voices may be insulting, argumentative or imperative); and disturbed emotion where victims become emotionally volatile or show...
B. Precipitating Factors The manifestation of symptoms begins at the most concrete level with alterations in neurotransmitters and/or changes in cerebral blood flow patterns. Specifically, dopamine and serotonin are implicated in schizophrenia. With no set formula, upsetting the balance of neurotransmitters can precipitate disease symptom onset. Stress and other environmental triggers are implicated in the increase or decrease of symptoms. Social isolation may be a major environmental trigger. Substance abuse is
At one point or another in our lives, we are all beginners. We begin college, a first job, a first love affair, and perhaps a first dissertation project. We bring a great deal to these new situations, including our temperament, previous education, and family situations. Yet, as adults, we also learn. In romantic relationships, couples report having to learn how to interact successfully with their partners. College students routinely report
Beautiful Mind Ron Howard's 2001 film A Beautiful Mind caused as much controversy over its treatment of mental illness as it did over its winning the Academy Award for best picture. Based on Sylvia Nassar's book of the same name, A Beautiful Mind chronicles the life of a Nobel Prize-winning mathematician who suffered from schizophrenia, one of the most little-understood mental diseases. While the film may not have deserved the
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The audience is realized to find that he has been dreaming, but the dread remains for both he father and the son. Early on in genetics was given some effect in diagnosis of schizophrenia: In a classic 1966 paper, Leonard Heston compared foster children who were separated at birth from their schizophrenic biological mothers and foster children who were separated at birth from their psychologically healthy biological mothers. Schizophrenia appeared
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