What are the main characteristics of schizophrenia?
What is heterogeneity?
What is the lifetime risk of developing schizophrenia?
When is schizophrenia most frequently manifested?
What is the gender difference in schizophrenia?
- men display symptoms earlier and more severely
What is the prognosis of individuals with schizophrenia?
What has been the historical view of schizophrenia?
What are the phases of schizophrenia over a lifetime?
- middle/active phase → positive symptoms → symptomatic periods episodic (with identifiable exacerbations and remissions) or continuous → functional deficits tend to worsen → treatment and relapse
What are the three main symptom clusters in schizophrenia?
What are positive symptoms?
What are hallucinations?
What are delusions?
- most commonly persecutory → referential (thinking something refers to you, "the TV is talking to me" etc.) → somatic → religious → grandiose
What is disorganized speech?
What are negative symptoms?
→ sparse speech and withdrawal → affect flattening → avollition → anhedonia → alogia → asociality
What is affect flattening?
What is avolition?
What is alogia?
What is grossly disorganized behaviour?
What is catatonic behaviour?
What is waxy flexibility?
What are examples of cognitive impairments resulting from schizophernia?
- Disorganized speech → incoherence → loose associations → neologisms → poor verbal fluency (word salad) → excessive concreteness
What are the three forms of disorganized thought in schizophrenia?
What are neologisms?
What is clang association?