Schizophrenia Overview
The term "schizophrenia" refers to one of the most
debilitating and
baffling mental illnesses known. Though it has a specific set of symptoms,
Schizophrenia varies in its severity from individual to individual, and even within
any one afflicted individual from one time period to another.
The symptoms of schizophrenia generally can be
controlled with treatment and, in more than
50 percent of individuals given access to continuous
schizophrenia treatment and
rehabilitation over many years, recovery is often possible. Though researchers
and mental health professionals don't know
what causes schizophrenia, they have
developed treatments that allow most persons with schizophrenia to work, live
with their families and enjoy friends. But like those with diabetes, people
with schizophrenia probably will be under medical care for the rest of their
lives.
Symptoms
Generally, schizophrenia begins during adolescence or young adulthood. The
symptoms of schizophrenia appear gradually and family and friends may not notice them as the
illness takes initial hold. Often, the young man or woman feels tense, can't
concentrate or sleep, and withdraws socially. But at some point, loved ones
realize the patient's personality has changed. Work performance, appearance and
social relationships may begin to deteriorate.
As the illness progresses, the symptoms often become more bizarre. The
patient develops peculiar behavior, begins talking in nonsense, and has unusual
perceptions. This is the beginning of psychosis. Psychiatrists
diagnose
schizophrenia when a patient has had active symptoms of the illness (such as a
psychotic episode) for at least two weeks, with other symptoms lasting six
months. In many cases, patients experience psychotic symptoms for many months
before seeking help. Schizophrenia seems to worsen and become better in cycles
known as relapse and remission, respectively. At times, people suffering from
schizophrenia appear relatively normal. However, during the acute or psychotic
phase, people with schizophrenia cannot think logically and may lose all sense
of who they and others are. They suffer from delusions, hallucinations or
disordered thinking and speech.
Delusions are thoughts that are fragmented, bizarre and have no basis in
reality. For example, people suffering from schizophrenia might believe that
someone is spying on or planning to harm them or that someone can
"hear" their thoughts, insert thoughts into their minds, or control
their feelings, actions or impulses. Patients might believe they are Jesus, or
that they have unusual powers and abilities.
People suffering from schizophrenia also have hallucinations. The most
common hallucination in schizophrenia is hearing voices that comment on the
patient's behavior, insult the patient or give commands.
Visual hallucinations,such as seeing nonexistent things and tactile hallucinations,
such as a burning or itching sensation, also can occur.
Patients also suffer disordered thinking in which the associations among
their thoughts are very loose. They may shift from one topic to another
completely unrelated topic without realizing they are making no logical sense.
They may substitute sounds or rhymes for words or make up their own words,
which have no meaning to others.
These symptoms don't mean people with schizophrenia are completely out of
touch with reality. They know, for example, that people eat three times a day,
sleep at night and use the streets for driving vehicles. For that reason, their
behavior may appear quite normal much of the time.
However, their illness does severely distort their ability to know whether
an event or situation they perceive is real. A person with schizophrenia
waiting for a green light at a crosswalk doesn't know how to react when he
hears a voice say, "You really smell bad." Is that a real voice,
spoken by the jogger standing next to him, or is it only in his head? Is it
real or a hallucination when he sees blood pouring from the side of the person
next to him in a college classroom? This uncertainty adds to the terror already
created by the distorted perceptions.
Psychotic symptoms of schizophrenia may lessen--a period during which
doctors say the patient is in the residual stage or remission. Other symptoms,
such as social withdrawal, inappropriate or blunted emotions, and extreme
apathy, may continue during both these periods of remission and periods when
psychosis returns--a period called relapse, and may persist for years. People
with schizophrenia who are in remission still may not be mentally able to bathe
or dress appropriately. They may speak in a monotone and report that they have
no emotions at all. They appear to others as strange, disconcerting people who
have odd speech habits and who live socially marginal lives.
There are many types of schizophrenia. For example, a person whose symptoms
are most often colored by feelings of persecution is said to have
"paranoid schizophrenia;" a person who is often incoherent but has no
delusions is said to have "disorganized schizophrenia." Even more
disabling than the delusions and hallucinations are the symptoms of
"negative" or "deficit" schizophrenia. Negative or deficit
schizophrenia refers to the lack or absence of initiative, motivation, social
interest, enjoyment and emotional responsiveness. Because schizophrenia can
vary from person to person in intensity, severity and frequency of both
psychotic and residual symptoms, many scientists use the word
"schizophrenia" to describe a spectrum of illnesses that range from
relatively mild to severe. Others think of schizophrenia as a group of related
disorders, much as "cancer" describes many different but related
illnesses.
Some Numbers
Schizophrenia affects men and women equally, however its onset in women is
typically five years later than with men. About 150 of every 100,000 persons
will develop schizophrenia. Though it is a relatively rare illness, its early
age of onset and the lifelong disability, emotional and financial devastation
it brings to its victims and their families make schizophrenia one of the most
catastrophic mental illnesses. Schizophrenia fills more hospital beds than
almost any other illness, and Federal figures reflect the cost of schizophrenia
to be from $30 billion to $48 billion in direct medical costs, lost
productivity and Social Security pensions.
Theories About Causes
Theories about the causes of schizophrenia
abound, but research hasn't
pinpointed the origins.
In years past, psychiatric researchers theorized that schizophrenia arose
from bad parenting. A cold, distant and unfeeling mother was called
"schizophrenigenic" because it was believed that such a mother could,
through inadequate care, cause the symptoms of schizophrenia. This theory has
been discredited today.
Most scientists now suspect that people inherit a susceptibility to the
illness, which can be triggered by environmental events such as a viral
infection that changes the body's chemistry, a highly stressful situation in
adult life, or a combination of these.
While scientists have long known that the illness runs in families and much
recent research evidence supports the linking of schizophrenia to heredity. For
example, studies show that children with one parent suffering from
schizophrenia have an eight to 18 percent chance of developing the illness,
even if they were adopted by mentally healthy parents. If both parents suffer
from schizophrenia, the risk rises to between 15 and 50 percent. Children whose
biological parents are mentally healthy but whose adoptive parentssuffer from
schizophrenia have a one percent chance of developing the disease, the same
rate as the general population.
Moreover, if one identical twin suffers from schizophrenia, there is a 50 to
60 percent chance that the sibling--who has identical genetic make-up also has
schizophrenia.
But people don't inherit schizophrenia directly, as they inherit the color
of their eyes or hair. Like many genetically related illnesses, schizophrenia
appears when the body is undergoing the hormonal and physicalchanges of
adolescence. Genes govern the brain's structure and biochemistry. Because
structure and biochemistry change dramatically in teen and young adult years,
some researchers suggest that schizophrenia lies "dormant" during
childhood. It emerges as the body and brain undergo changes during puberty.
Certain genetic combinations could mean a person doesn't produce a certain
enzyme or other biochemical, and that deficiency produces illnesses ranging
from cystic fibrosis to, possibly, diabetes. Other genetic combinationscould
mean that specific nerves don't develop correctly or completely, giving rise to
genetic deafness. Similarly, a genetically determined sensitivity could mean
the brain of a person with schizophrenia is more prone to be affected by
certain biochemicals, or that it produces inadequate or excessive amounts of
biochemicals needed to maintain mental health. Genetically determined triggers
could also the development of part of the brain of a person with schizophrenia,
or could cause problems with the way the person's brain screens stimuli, so
that the person with schizophrenia is overwhelmed by sensory information which
normal people can easily handle.
These theories arise from the ability of researchers to see the structure
and activity of the brain through very sophisticated medical technology. For
example:
- Using computer images of brain activity, scientists have learned that a
part of the brain called the prefrontal cortex--which governs thought and
higher mental functions--"lights up" when healthy people are given an
analytical task. This area of the brain remains quiet in those with
schizophrenia who are given the same task. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and
other techniques have suggested that the neural connections and circuits
between the temporal lobe structures and the prefrontal cortex may be have an
abnormal structure or may function abnormally.
- The prefrontal cortex in the brains of some schizophrenia sufferers appears
to have either atrophied or developed abnormally.
- Computed axial tomography or CAT scans have shown subtle abnormalities in
the brains of some people suffering from schizophrenia. The ventricles--the
fluid-filled spaces within the brain--are larger in the brains of some people
with schizophrenia.
- Successful use of medications that interfere with the brain's production of
a biochemical called dopamine indicates that the brains of those with
schizophrenia are either extraordinarily sensitive to dopamine or produce too
much dopamine. This theory is strengthened by observing treatment for
Parkinson's disease, caused by too little dopamine. Parkinson's patients, who
are treated with medication that helps increase the amount of dopamine, may
also develop psychotic symptoms.
Schizophrenia is similar in several respects to "autoimmune"
illnesses -disorders like multiple sclerosis (MS) and amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gherig's disease), caused when the body's immune
systemattacks itself. Like the autoimmune diseases, schizophrenia is not
present at birth but develops during adolescence or young adulthood. It comes
and goes in cycles of remission and relapse, and it runs in families. Because
of these similarities, scientists suspect schizophrenia could fall into the
autoimmune category.
Some scientists think genetics, autoimmune illness and viral infections
combine to cause schizophrenia. Genes determine the body's immune reaction to
viral infection. Instead of stopping when the infection is over, the genes tell
the body's immune system to continue its attack on a specific part of the body.
This is similar to the theories about arthritis, in which the immune system is
thought to attack the joints.
The genes of people with schizophrenia may tell the immune system to attack
the brain after a viral infection. This theory is supported by the discovery
that the blood of people with schizophrenia contains antibodies--immune system
cells--specific to the brain. Moreover, researchers in a National Institute of
Mental Health study found abnormal proteins in the fluid that surrounds the
brain and spinal cord in 30 percent of people with schizophrenia but in none of
the mentally healthy people they studied. These same proteins are found in 90
percent of the people who have suffered herpes simplex encephalitis, an
inflammation of the brain caused by the family of viruses that causes warts and
other illnesses.
Finally, some scientists suspect a viral infection during pregnancy. Many
people suffering from schizophrenia were born in late winter or early spring.
That timing means their mothers may have suffered from a slow virus during the
winter months of their pregnancy. The virus could have infected the baby to
produce pathological changes over many years after birth. Coupled with a
genetic vulnerability, a virus could trigger schizophrenia.
Most psychiatrists today believe that the above--genetic predisposition,
environmental factors such as viral infection, stressors from the environment
such as poverty and emotional or physical abuse--form a constellation of
"stress factors" that should be taken into account in understanding
schizophrenia. An unsupportive home or social environment and inadequate social
skills can bring on schizophrenia in those with genetic vulnerability or cause
relapse in those already suffering with the disease. Psychiatrists also believe
these stress factors can often be offset with "protective factors"
when the person with schizophrenia receives proper maintenance doses of
antipsychotic medication, and help in creating a secure network of supportive
family and friends, in finding a steady and understanding place of employment,
and in learning necessary social and coping skills.
Treatments
Psychiatrists have found a number of
antipsychotic medications that help
bring biochemical imbalances closer to normal. The medications significantly
reduce the hallucinations and delusions and help the patient maintain coherent
thoughts. Like all medications, however, antipsychotic drugs should be taken
only under the close supervision of a psychiatrist or other physician.
Antipsychotic medications are important in reducing or eliminating the
chances of relapse. One study showed that 60 to 80 percent of those who did not
take medication as part of their treatment had a relapse the first year after
leaving the hospital. Between 20 and 50 percent of those who did take
medication were rehospitalized that first year; however, if the patients
continued taking medication beyond the first year, relapse rates fell to 10
percent.
Like virtually all other medications, antipsychotic agents have side
effects. While the patient's body adjusts to the medication during the first
few weeks, he or she may have to contend with dry mouth, blurred vision,
constipation and drowsiness. One may also experience dizziness when standing up
due to a drop in blood pressure. These side effects usually disappear after a
few weeks.
Other side effects include restlessness (which can resemble anxiety),
stiffness, tremor, and a dampening of accustomed gestures and movements.
Patients may feel muscle spasms or cramps in the head or neck,restlessness, or
a slowing and stiffening of muscle activity in the face, body, arms and legs.
Though discomforting, these are not medically serious and are reversible.
Because some other side effects may be more serious and not fully
reversible, anyone taking these medications should be closely monitored by a
psychiatrist. One such side effect is called tardive dyskinesia (TD), a
condition that affects 20 to 30 percent of people taking antipsychotic drugs.
TD is more common among older patients.
It begins with small tongue tremors, facial tics and abnormal jaw movements.
These symptoms may progress into thrusting and rolling of the tongue, lip
licking and smacking, pouting, grimacing, and chewing or sucking motions.
Later, the patient may develop spasmodic movements of the hands, feet, arms,
legs, neck and shoulders.
Most of these symptoms reach a plateau and do not become progressively
worse. TD is severe in less than 5 percent of its victims. If medication is
stopped, TD also fades away among 30 percent of all patients and in 90 percent
of those younger than 40. There is also evidence that TD subsides eventually,
even in patients who continue with medication. Despite the risk of TD, many
suffering with schizophrenia accept medication because it so effectively ends
the horrifying and painful psychoses brought on by their illness. However, the
unpleasant side effects of antipsychotic medication also leads many patients to
stop using medication against the advice of their psychiatrist. The refusal of
patients with schizophrenia to comply with psychiatrists' treatment
recommendations is a serious challenge to those specializing in the treatment
of chronically mentally ill people. Psychiatrists treating people with
schizophrenia must often practice with tolerance and flexibility to overcome
this resistance.
There is also hope that the newer generations of antipsychotic drugs now
being introduced and under development will prove to be a great help to people
with schizophrenia that has been resistant to treatment in the past, with fewer
side effects and greater effectiveness with schizophrenia's symptoms. Clozapine
and risperidone (were among the first approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration) provide two examples. Clozapine doesn't list TD as one of its
side effects and has helped many whose conditions were not substantially
improved by the older generation of neuroleptic medications. Use of clozapine
is restricted, however, by an expensive medical monitoring system made
necessary by the fact that the medicine can cause agranulocytosis, a blood
disorder that occurs in one to two percent of patients who take it and which
can prove fatal if it is not observed. Risperidone may be safer than clozapine
and have fewer of its side effects, including agranulocytosis. By ending or
reducing the painful hallucinations, delusions and thought disorders,
medications allow a patient to gain benefit from rehabilitation and counseling
aimed at promoting the individual's functioning in society. Social skills
training, which can be provided in group, family or individual sessions, is a
structured and educational approach to learning social relationship and
independent living skills. By using behavioral learning techniques, such as
coaching, modeling and positive reinforcement, skills trainers have been
successful in overcoming the cognitive deficits that interfere with
rehabilitation. Research studies show that social skills training improves
social adjustment and equips patients with means of coping with stressors,
thereby reducing relapse rates by up to 50 percent.
Another type of learning-based treatment that has been documented to reduce
relapse rates is behaviorally oriented, psychoeducational family therapy.
Mental health professionals recognize the important role families play in
treatment and should maintain open lines of communication with the families as
treatment evolves over time. Providing family members, including the patient,
with a better understanding of schizophrenia and its treatment, while helping
them to improve their communication and problem-solving skills, is becoming a
standard practice in many psychiatric clinics and mental health centers. In one
study, when psychoeducational family therapy and social skills training were
combined, the relapse rate during the first year of treatment was zero.
Psychiatric management and supervision of regular medication use, social
skills training, behavioral and psychoeducational family therapy, and
vocational rehabilitation must be delivered within the context of a community
support program. The key personnel in community support programs are clinical
case managers who are experienced in linking the patient to needed services,
assuring that social services as well as medical and psychiatric treatment is
delivered, forming solid and supportive long-term helpingrelationships with the
patient, and advocating for patients' needs when there is a crisis or problem.
When continuing treatment and supportive care is available in the community,
with a partnership of family, patient and professional caregivers, patients can
learn to control their symptoms, identify early warning signs of relapse,
develop a relapse prevention plan, and succeed in vocational and social
rehabilitation programs. For the vast majority of persons with schizophrenia,
the future is bright with optimism--new and more effective medications are on
the horizon, neuroscientists are learning more and more about the function of
the brain and how it goes awry in schizophrenia, and psychosocial
rehabilitation programs are increasingly successful in restoring functioning
and quality of life.
Comprehensive information about Schizophrenia
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(c) Copyright 1988 American Psychiatric Association
Revised 1994
Produced by the APA Joint Commission on Public Affairs and the Division of
Public Affairs. This document orignated as text of a pamphlet developed for
educational purposes and does not necessarily reflect opinion or policy of the
American Psychiatric Association.
Additional Resources
Ascher-Svanum, Haya and Krause, Audrey, Psychoeducational Groups for
Patients with Schizophrenia: A Guide for Practitioners. Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen
Publishers, 1991.
Deveson, Anne., The Me I'm Here: One Family's Experience of Schizophrenia.
Penguin Books, 1991.
Howells, John G., The Concept of Schizophrenia: Historical Perspectives.
Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1991.
Kuehnel TG, Liberman, RP, Storzbach D and Rose, G, Resource Book for
Psychiatric Rehabilitation. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins, 1990.
Kuipers, Liz., Family Work for Schizophrenia: A Practical Guide. Washington,
D.C.: American Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1992
Liberman, Robert Paul, Psychiatric Rehabilitation of Chronic Mental
Patients. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1988.
Matson, Johnny L., Ed., Chronic Schizophrenia and Adult Autism: Issues in
Diagnosis, Assessment, and Psychological Treatment. New York: Springer, 1989.
Mendel, Werner, Treating Schizophrenia. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1989.
Menninger, W. Walter and Hannah, Gerald, The Chronic Mental Patient.
American Psychiatric Press, Inc., Washington, D.C., 1987. 224 pages.
Schizophrenia: Questions and Answers. Public Inquiries Branch, National
Institute of Mental Health, Room 7C-02, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857.
1986. Free single copies. (Available in Spanish_"Esquizofrenia: Preguntas
y Respuestas")
Seeman, Stanley and Greben, Mary, Eds., Office Treatment of Schizophrenia.
Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1990.
Torrey, E. Fuller., Surviving Schizophrenia: A Family Manual. New York, NY:
Harper and Row, 1988.
Other Resources
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
(202) 966-7300
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill
(703) 524-7600
National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
(516) 829-0091
National Mental Health Association
(703) 684-7722
National Institute of Mental Health Information Resources and Inquiries
Branch
(301) 443-4513
National Self-Help Clearinghouse
(212) 354-8525
Tardive Dyskinesia/Tardive Dystonia
(206) 522-3166
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