who was Emil Kraepelin (1898)
who was Eugen Bleuler (1911)
what is Schizophrenia?
what are positive (type 1) symptoms?
delusions:
- false belief despite evidence to contrary, distorting reality (e.g. patient beliefs someone is plotting against them)
- thought insertion
- thought withdrawal
- thought broadcasting
- not being in control of own actions
Hallucinations:
- perceptual experience seems real in absence of physical proof; most common: auditory, visual, olfactory (e.g seeing an animal or person that isn’t real)
Disorganised behaviour
- can affect speech, difficulties with routine tasks, inappropriate behaviour
what are negative (type II) symptoms
diminished emotional expression
- affect: blunted affect, mood or emotional state, limited range of emotions
- alogia: poverty of speech, lack of conversation
Avolition
- apathy (lack of motivation)
- social withdrawal
- Anhedonia: inability to feel pleasure
what are cognitive deficits?
Presence of cognitive deficits associated with poor daily functioning and quality of life
tetsing for cognitive deficits
Schizophrenia as a neurodevelopmental disorder
what are the genetic risk factors of developing SZ?
what are the environmental risk factors of developing SZ?
what are the 4 neurotransmitters involved in SZ?
what is the dopamine hypothesis?
dopamine hypothesis:
- Important role of mesocortical dopaminergic pathway (from tegmentum)
- dopaminergic agonist, i.e. drugs that increase dopamine levels, like cocaine, amphetamine or L-Dopa, can induce psychotic symptoms, which resemble positive symptoms in individuals with schizophrenia
- plausible to assume a crucial role of the DA system in schizophrenia, with high levels of dopamine causing positive symptoms
- Disturbances in this transmitter system could explain various cognitive impairments seen in individuals with schizophrenia
dopamine hypothesis: dissociation between cortical and striatal DA
Overall, the DA hypothesis cannot be the whole story. Usually, modulations in one transmitter system can also affect other neurotransmitter systems
Glutamate (Glu)
Moghaddam & Javitt (2012): 2 phases of Glu modulations in SZ patients
what is Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS)
Meta analysis of MRS studies in psychosis patients, Sydnor & Roalf (2020)
Neurotransmitters and the multiple systems affected
Differences in brain anatomy in patients with SZ and without
Post-mortem studies have shown that brains of schizophrenia patients weigh less than the average weight of neurologically healthy people. This weight loss might be explained by the following observations:
Meta-analysis investigated grey matter (GM) loss in individuals with SZ Liloia et al. (2021, NBR)
why can it be hard to develop treatments for cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia?
Cognitive symptoms associated with schizophrenia, Barch & Ceaser (2012)
Dual mechanisms of control (Braver et al., 2009)
Barch & Ceaser have suggested that it’s the proactive control aspect that is impaired in individuals with schizophrenia. These individuals would need to rely more on reactive control when completing tasks.
Association between proactive control deficits in schizophrenia and impairments in DLPFC activity, Barch & Ceaser (2012)