- Floating Topic
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Psychosis
- Loss of contact with reality
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Classic symptoms
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Delusions
- Ideas strongly believed but have no basis in fact
- Delusions of grandeur, of control, of persecution
- Fixed, false, bizarre beliefs
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Hallucinations
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Perceptions that occur in the absence of external stimuli
- sight, sound etc
- Abnormal sensory experience
- Most commonly appears in form of schizophrenia (also in mania, dementia, drug abuse etc)
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Multiple Sclerosis
- Reiss et al (2006)
- Subtopic 2
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Research over the last 4 decades has revealed the importance
of dopamine (DA), D2 receptors, and the basal
ganglia in psychotic thinking.
- Morris & Murray (2009)
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Schizophrenia
- Subtype of psychosis
- NOT split personality
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Heterogeneous
- Great variation in symptoms, triggers, cause and responsiveness to treatment
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Topic
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Believed by some to be group of distinct disorders with common features
- e.g. 'cenesthetic schizophrenia' Huber (1992)
- Not necessarily linked to violence
- Schizophrenia signs linked to left hemisphere dysfunction - Pierre Flor-Henry 1969
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Positive Symptoms
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Hallucinations
- Hallucinations - more auditory than visual
- Hearing own thoughts from other voice / arguing voices
- Voices commenting on patient's behaviour
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Delusions
- Thoughts are broadcast/transmitted
- Thoughts not own
- Thoughts are stolen
- Feelings and behaviour controlled by external force
- Problems of agency due to passivity symptoms
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Negative Symptoms
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Behavioural Deficits
- Precede and endure beyond acute episode
- Predict poor life quality
- Danger of diagnosing these symptoms
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The 5 'A's
- Asociality
- Avolition
- Alogia
- Ahedonia
- Flat affect
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Disorganised Symptoms
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Disorganised Speech
- Poor organisation of thoughts and comprehension of content
- Predict poor life quality
- Danger of diagnosing these symptoms
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The 5 'A's
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Asociality
- Dislike of social interaction (usually first symptom)
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Avolition
- Apathy, feeling drained of energy and lacking interest in normal goals
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Alogia
- Reduction in speech or speech content
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Ahedonia
- Inability to experience pleasure
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Flat affect
- Show almost no emotions
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Visual Hallucinations
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Simple
- Occipital lobe deficits
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Complex
- Cortical release phenomenon
- A common (10–15% prevalence) and often distressing consequence of vision loss