Psychosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is schizophrenia and how is it characterised?

A

Group of brain disorders characterised by disorders of thought, behaviour, perception and emotion

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2
Q

What is the one pathognomonic symptom of schizophrenia?

A

There isn’t one!

Having more than one symptom increases the risk

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3
Q

There is a strong genetic link to schizophrenia. True/False?

A

True

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4
Q

List 3 “positive” symptoms of schizophrenia

A

Delusions
Hallucinations
Thought disorder

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5
Q

List 4 “negative” symptoms of schizophrenia

A

Apathy
Lack of volition
Social withdrawal
Cognitive impairment

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6
Q

Positive symptoms are harder to treat than negative symptoms in schizophrenia. True/False?

A

False

Positive symptoms are often easier to treat

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7
Q

According to Schneider’s first rank symptoms for schizophrenia, list some thought disorders

A

Thoughts spoken out loud
Running commentary
3rd person voices talking
Thought withdrawal, broadcasting or insertion

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8
Q

What is passivity phenomena?

A

Experience where acts/emotions/feelings are being controlled by an external party

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9
Q

A patient must have Schneider’s first rank symptoms to be diagnosed with schizophrenia. True/False?

A

False

They are not pathognomonic and can be seen in other psychoses

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10
Q

What is a delusion?

A

A fixed belief that cannot be changed by logical thought or evidence

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11
Q

What is a hallucination?

A

Perceptual, fantastical experience that is believed to be real without evidence

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12
Q

List the different modalities by which hallucinations can occur

A
Auditory (most common)
Visual
Olfactory
Gustatory
Tactile
Kinaesthetic
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13
Q

Which type of auditory hallucination - 1st, 2nd or 3rd person - is more typical of schizophrenia?

A

3rd person

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14
Q

What is meant by “word salad”?

A

Mish mash of words that together don’t make sense

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15
Q

What is meant by thought withdrawal?

A

Belief that thoughts are being removed by an external party - a delusional explanation for thought blocking

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16
Q

What is meant by thought broadcasting?

A

Belief that people understand your thoughts without you having to voice them

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17
Q

List features of emotional disorder that can occur in psychoses such as schizophrenia

A
Blunted affect
Incongruent mood
Apathy
Lack of motivation
Anhedonia
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18
Q

What is the main motor disorder that may occur in schizophrenia?

A

Catatonia

19
Q

What is catatonia?

A

State of increased tone of muscles at rest, abolished by voluntary activity

20
Q

What are the main treatments for catatonia?

A

ECT

Benzodiazepines

21
Q

What is the peak incidence of schizophrenia for men and women?

A

Men: 15-25
Women: 25-35

22
Q

List factors that indicate good prognosis for schizophrenia

A

Older age of onset
Being female
Mood disturbance (elation especially)
Family history of mood disorder

23
Q

List factors that indicate poor prognosis for schizophrenia

A

Long duration of untreated psychosis
Insidious early onset
Cognitive impairment
Enlarged brain ventricles

24
Q

Psychosis is a diagnosis. True/False?

A

False

Description of symptoms rather than diagnosis

25
Q

What is psychosis?

A

Inability to distinguish subjective experience from reality, characterised by lack of insight

26
Q

List psychotic experiences

A
Hallucinations
Delusions
Thought disorders
Emotional disturbance
Physical disruption
27
Q

List the main differential diagnoses of psychosis

A
Schizophrenia
Schizoaffective disorder
Drug toxicity
Mania
Depression
Delusional disorder
Puerperal psychosis
Delirium
Dementia
28
Q

What is meant by flight of ideas?

A

Jumping from topic to topic by associating words together inappropriately

29
Q

How does tangential thinking differ from circumstantial thinking?

A

Tangential: wander off from topic/question and never return
Circumstantial: excessive detail relating to topic, eventually return to topic

30
Q

What is meant by self-referential experience?

A

Belief that environment is reacting to you, i.e. external events are related to oneself
e.g. tv/radio is talking to you specifically

31
Q

List some common drugs that can cause psychosis

A
Steroids
Cannabis
Amphetamine
Cocaine
Tobacco
Alcohol
Opioids
32
Q

How is depressive psychosis classically typified?

A

Mood congruent with psychosis - delusions of guilt/pessimism on top of depressed mood

33
Q

What is a grandiose delusion?

A

Delusion where one thinks they are vastly superior and have superhuman like qualities

34
Q

What is schizoaffective disorder?

A

Mixed picture of schizophrenia + bipolar disorder where someone displays schizophrenia but their mood is also affected

35
Q

At what time of day is delirium typically worse at?

A

Night

36
Q

What are the 3 main cortical changes that occur in schizophrenia?

A

Reduced frontal lobe volume
Reduced frontal lobe grey matter
Enlarged ventricles

37
Q

Which neurotransmitter causes a psychotic state when in excess?

A

Dopamine

38
Q

List the 3 main dopaminergic pathways in the brain

A

Nigrostriatal
Mesolimbic
Tuberoinfundibular

39
Q

Which dopaminergic pathway is typically involved in schizophrenia?

A

Mesolimbic system

40
Q

Name some dopamine antagonists (anti-psychotics) that can be used for schizophrenia

A

Haloperidol
Raclopride
Clozapine

41
Q

Subcortical dopamine hyperactivity/hypoactivity leads to psychosis

A

Subcortical dopamine hyperactivity leads to psychosis

42
Q

What is the benefit of atypical antipsychotics over typical antipsychotics?

A

Less likely to induce extra-pyramidal side effects

Better efficacy

43
Q

List some atypical antipsychotics

A

Clozapine
Aripiprazole
Risperidone

44
Q

What is the fatal side effect of clozapine that makes it a 3rd line agent for psychosis?

A

Agranulocytosis