SCHIZOPHRENIA

skĭtˌsəfrēˈnēə, group of severe mental disorders characterized by reality distortions resulting in unusual thought patterns and behaviors. Because there is often little or no logical relationship between the thoughts and feelings of a person with schizophrenia, the disorder has often been called "split personality." However, the condition should not be confused with multiple personality, a disorder in which the individual has two or more distinct personalities that dominate at different times.

In 1896, the German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin grouped what were previously considered unrelated mental diseases under the term dementia praecox. It was not until 1908, however, that an influential essay by Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler corrected Kraepelin's theory that the disease was an organic brain deterioration and thus incurable. Bleuler introduced the term schizophrenia to replace dementia praecox, emphasizing the dissociative phenomena in the mind and avoiding the implications of early onset and progressive brain deterioration.

Schizophrenic disorders generally begin in the late teenage years or early adulthood and tend to occur in withdrawn, seclusive individuals. The lifetime prevalence worldwide has been estimated to be just under 1%, and the disorder affects 1.5 to 2 million people in the United States alone. Symptoms include disturbances of thought, both in form and content (see delusion), and disturbances of perception, most commonly appearing as visual or aural hallucinations.

There are five major types of schizophrenia listed by the American Psychiatric Association in its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The most severe are disorganized (hebephrenic) schizophrenia, characterized by hallucinations, delusions, inappropriate laughing and crying, incoherent speech, and infantile behavior; and catatonic schizophrenia, characterized by physical rigidity or hyperactivity. Paranoid schizophrenics can often function relatively normally, although they may be disturbed by persecutory delusions and hallucinations, and they tend to exhibit argumentative behavior. The presence of a combination of symptoms from other types is classified as undifferentiated schizophrenia. Residual schizophrenia is constituted by minor symptoms, which occur as an active episode diminishes.

The cause of schizophrenia is unknown. Genetic factors appear to be involved in producing susceptibility to the condition, with studies among identical twins showing a 30%–50% concordance rate, a figure that has been confirmed by the results of adoption studies. Biochemical research suggests that high levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine, or excessive numbers of receptors for dopamine, may be at the root of schizophrenia. Medical imaging studies have revealed various physical and physiological anomalies in some patients. Other research has focused on mistiming of neural responses to stimuli in the brain. Many researchers maintain that a combination of influences, including such environmental factors as viral illness or malnutrition in the patient's mother during pregnancy, may lead to schizophrenia,

Antipsychotic drugs (see psychopharmacology), sometimes in conjunction with psychotherapy, have greatly improved the treatment of schizophrenia. Hospitalization is sometimes needed initially to provide basic personal needs (safety, food, and hygiene) while acute symptoms are treated. Most patients return to the community with varying degrees of independence and with good prospects for long-term remission of symptoms.

See R. Miller and S. Mason, Diagnosis: Schizophrenia (2002); studies by I. I. Gottesman (1991) and H. Häfner and W. F. Gattaz, ed. (1991).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Schizophrenia  - 7339 results

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SCHIZOPHRENIA AND MANIC-DEPRESSIVE DISORDER OTHER BOOKS BY E...of Psychiatry Why Did You Do That? Schizophrenia and Civilization Witchdoctors and Psychiatrists...Ill: A Rating of State Programs Surviving Schizophrenia: A Family Manual Nowhere to Go: The Tragic...
VOLUME 2 Schizophrenia Second Edition WPA Series...Norman Sartorius VOLUME 2 Schizophrenia Second Edition Edited by...xv CHAPTER 1 DIAGNOSIS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA 1 Diagnosis of Schizophrenia...
Schizophrenia A New Guide for Clinicians John G. Csernansky...Introduction American psychiatry was preoccupied with schizophrenia in the decades following the second World War. Nathan...translation of it as Dementia Praecox, or the Group of Schizophrenias, stimulated interest, and most patients admitted...
SCHIZOPHRENIA SCHIZOPHRENIA Its Origins and Need-Adapted Treatment Yrjo O. Alanen...CHAPTER TWO General notes on schizophrenia 25 Symptoms 25...
WHY DOES SCHIZOPHRENIA DEVELOP AT LATE ADOLESCENCE...Approach to Psychosis WHY DOES SCHIZOPHRENIA DEVELOP AT LATE ADOLESCENCE...Data Harrop, Chris. Why does schizophrenia develop at late adolescence? : a...
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journal articles on: Schizophrenia  - 2030 results

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...Transcending the Mind-Body Dichotomy: Schizophrenia Reexamined. by Fred Bemak , Lawrence R. Epp Schizophrenia is presented as a biopsychological...levels thought to contribute to schizophrenia are viewed as a biological reflection...
Diversity in schizophrenia: toward a richer biopsychososocial...major mental illness, specifically schizophrenia, excluding biological or neurological...research and clinical efforts because schizophrenia is such a complex biopsychosocial...
Schizophrenia in College Students in Korea: A Qualitative Perspective. by Kyung-Mi Sung , Kathryn R...to identify the salient themes that characterize the life experiences of college students with schizophrenia. METHODS. Twenty-one schizophrenia patients enrolled in college underwent in-depth interviews employing semistructured questionnaires...
...Medications in the Employment of People with Schizophrenia. by Gary R. Bond , Piper S...health consumers (that is, people with schizophrenia and other severe psychiatric disorders...health consumers, especially those with schizophrenia, have much less favorable outcomes...
Theory-based research in Schizophrenia. by Lora Humphrey Beebe...models to guide research into schizophrenia. PURPOSE. To review the most...biological and environmental models of schizophrenia. SOURCES. Published literature...
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magazine articles on: Schizophrenia  - 634 results

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Schizophrenia: two sides of the mirror. by Mary V. Seeman This story is about two lives...for 40 years, and Carries. Carrie has been engaged in a long personal struggle with schizophrenia. This is an account of how the illness called schizophrenia evolves within a person over that persons lifetime. It is also an account of how the...
Schizophrenia: Drugs, Therapy Can Turn Life around for Some. by Margie Patlak "The visions are extremely...ridicule to deceive, derange, and force me into a world of crippling paranoia." -- Robert Bayley, a schizophrenia sufferer, in Schizophrenia Bulletin, No. 4, 1996, published by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). More than 300...
Trouble in Paradise: High Schizophrenia Rates among Pacific Islanders...one of the highest rates of schizophrenia in the world. Although researchers...their lives. Among Palauan men, schizophrenias prevalence soars as high as...
New Schizophrenia Drug; Balancing Hope with Safety...The young woman suffered from schizophrenia, a devastating mental disorder that...estimate that perhaps 200,000 chronic schizophrenia patients dont improve with traditional...
Sickness and Schizophrenia: Psychotic Ills Tied to Previous...contribute to the development of schizophrenia by young adulthood, although scarce...psychotic illnesses, including schizophrenia, by ages 17 to 29. Infections with...
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...Breakthrough in Our Understanding of Schizophrenia; Gene Discovery Is Expected to Lead...University have made a major breakthrough in schizophrenia research by identifying the genes associated...genetic variations associated with schizophrenia are present in the wider population...
Schizophrenia May Come from Tiny Gene Shifts. Byline: Mark Prigg...Correspondent TINY genetic variations may hold the key to schizophrenia, scientists claim. A third of all inherited cases...involved three teams who analysed genetic data from 8,014 schizophrenia sufferers, comparing them with samples from 19,090...
...Faulty Genes Linked to Higher Schizophrenia Risk. Byline: Associated...to a slightly higher risk of schizophrenia, new studies show. In a first-of-its-kind...at the genetic elements of schizophrenia, a massive international effort...
...Dependency Service; (How an Expert in Schizophrenia Describes His Job. Byline: FIONA...drug from an early age can trigger schizophrenia and other life-shattering conditions...he said. I work in a first contact schizophrenia service and it might as well be a cannabis...
Schizophrenia May Be Caused by Tiny Genetic Variations. Byline...Correspondent TINY genetic variations may hold the key to schizophrenia, scientists claim. A third of all inherited cases...illness. Three teams analysed genetic data from 8,014 schizophrenia sufferers, comparing them with samples from 19,090...
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encyclopedia articles on: Schizophrenia  - 34 results

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SCHIZOPHRENIA skit s fre ne , group of severe mental disorders...between the thoughts and feelings of a person with schizophrenia, the disorder has often been called "split personality...deterioration and thus incurable. Bleuler introduced the term schizophrenia to replace dementia praecox, emphasizing the dissociative...
...and behavioral disorders, including major depression , schizophrenia , and anxiety . Although the Greeks recognized the significance...manic-depressive psychosis (see bipolar disorder ) and schizophrenia . Gradually, some psychiatrists, led by Sigmund Freud...
MENTAL DISORDERS see bipolar disorder ; paranoia ; psychiatry ; psychosis ; schizophrenia . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Institute of Human Relations (1956 89) to conduct research on schizophrenia. He directed the Langham Clinic in London (1962 65), and...eliminated. Laing maintained the controversial position that schizophrenia was a culturally conditioned, internal conflict, a reaction...
...treatment of patients with severe mental disorders, particularly schizophrenia. In his work on the subject of schizophrenics, Sullivan...ed. by H. S. Perry and M. L. Gawel, 1953, repr. 1968); Schizophrenia as a Human Process (1962, repr. 1974). See biography...
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