What form of schizophrenia is most difficult to recognize. Special forms of schizophrenia. Duration of adequate therapy

Traditionally, the following forms of schizophrenia have been distinguished:

    Simple schizophrenia is characterized by the absence of productive symptoms and the presence of only schizophrenic symptoms proper in the clinical picture.

    Hebephrenic schizophrenia (may include hebephrenic-paranoid and hebephrenic-catatonic states).

    Catatonic schizophrenia (pronounced impairment or lack of movement; may include catatonic-paranoid states).

    Paranoid schizophrenia (there are delusions and hallucinations, but there is no speech disorder, erratic behavior, emotional impoverishment; includes depressive-paranoid and circular options).

Now there are also the following forms of schizophrenia:

    Hebephrenic schizophrenia

    Catatonic schizophrenia

    paranoid schizophrenia

    Residual schizophrenia (intensity of positive symptoms is low)

    Mixed, undifferentiated schizophrenia (schizophrenia does not belong to any of the listed forms)

The most common form of paranoid schizophrenia, which is characterized mainly by delusions of persecution. Although other symptoms such as thought disturbances and hallucinations are also present, the delusions of persecution are the most conspicuous. It is usually accompanied by suspicion and hostility. The constant fear generated by delusional ideas is also characteristic. Delusions of persecution may be present for years and develop to a large extent. As a rule, in patients with paranoid schizophrenia, there are neither noticeable changes in behavior, nor intellectual and social degradation, which are noted in patients with other forms. The functioning of the patient may seem surprisingly normal until his delusions are affected.

The hebephrenic form of schizophrenia differs from the paranoid form both in terms of symptoms and outcome. The predominant symptoms are marked mental difficulties and disturbances of affect or mood. Thinking can be so disorganized that it loses (or almost loses) the ability to communicate meaningfully; affect in most cases is inadequate, the mood does not correspond to the content of thinking, so that as a result, sad thoughts can be accompanied by a cheerful mood. In the long term, most of these patients expect a pronounced disorder of social behavior, manifested, for example, by a tendency to conflict and an inability to maintain a job, family, and close human relationships.

Catatonic schizophrenia is characterized primarily by abnormalities in the motor sphere, present almost throughout the course of the disease. Anomalous movements are very diverse; these may be posture and facial expressions, or performing almost any movement in a strange, unnatural way. The patient can spend hours in an absurd and uncomfortable mannered posture, alternating it with unusual actions such as repetitive stereotypical movements or gestures. The facial expression of many patients is frozen, facial expressions are absent or very poor; there may be some grimaces like puckering lips. Seemingly normal movements are sometimes interrupted suddenly and inexplicably, sometimes giving way to strange motor behavior. Along with pronounced motor anomalies, many other symptoms of schizophrenia, already discussed, are noted - paranoid delusions and other thought disorders, hallucinations, etc. The course of the catatonic form of schizophrenia is similar to hebephrenic, however, severe social degradation, as a rule, develops in the later period of the disease.

Another "classic" type of schizophrenia is known, but it is extremely rare and its isolation as a separate form of the disease is disputed by many experts. This is simple schizophrenia, first described by Bleuler, who applied the term to patients with impaired thinking or affect, but without delusions, catatonic symptoms, or hallucinations. The course of such disorders is considered progressive with an outcome in the form of social maladaptation.

The book edited by A. S. Tiganov “Endogenous mental illness” provides a more expanded and supplemented classification of the forms of schizophrenia. All data is summarized in one table:

“The question of the classification of schizophrenia since its separation into an independent nosological form remains debatable. There is still no single classification of clinical variants of schizophrenia for all countries. However, there is a certain continuity of modern classifications with those that appeared when schizophrenia was identified as a nosologically independent disease. In this regard, E. Kraepelin's classification, which is still used by both individual psychiatrists and national psychiatric schools, deserves special attention.

E. Kraepelin singled out catatonic, hebephrenic and simple forms of schizophrenia. With simple schizophrenia that occurs in adolescence, he noted a progressive impoverishment of emotions, intellectual unproductiveness, loss of interests, increasing lethargy, isolation, he also emphasized the rudimentary nature of positive psychotic disorders (hallucinatory, delusional and catatonic disorders). He characterized hebephrenic schizophrenia as foolishness, broken thinking and speech, catatonic and delusional disorders. Both simple and hebephrenic schizophrenia are characterized by an unfavorable course, while E. Kraepelin did not rule out the possibility of remissions in hebephrenia. In the catatonic form, the predominance of the catatonic syndrome was described in the form of both catatonic stupor and excitation, accompanied by pronounced negativism, delusional and hallucinatory inclusions. With the paranoid form identified later, the dominance of delusional ideas, usually accompanied by hallucinations or pseudo-hallucinations, was noted.

Later, circular, hypochondriacal, neurosis-like and other forms of schizophrenia were also identified.

The main disadvantage of E. Kraepelin's classification is its statistical nature, associated with the main principle of its construction - the predominance of one or another psychopathological syndrome in the clinical picture. Further studies confirmed the clinical heterogeneity of these forms and their different outcomes. For example, the catatonic form turned out to be completely heterogeneous in the clinical picture and prognosis, heterogeneity of acute and chronic delusional states, hebephrenic syndrome was found.

The ICD-10 has the following forms of schizophrenia: paranoid simple, hebephrenic, catatonic, undifferentiated and residual. Also included in the classification of the disease are post-schizophrenic depression, "other forms" of schizophrenia, and unspecified schizophrenia. If no special comments are required for the classical forms of schizophrenia, then the criteria for undifferentiated schizophrenia seem extremely amorphous; As for post-schizophrenic depression, its selection as an independent rubric is a matter of debate to a large extent.

Studies of the patterns of development of schizophrenia, conducted at the Department of Psychiatry of the Central Institute for Postgraduate Medical Education and at the Scientific Center for Mental Health of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences under the direction of A. V. Snezhnevsky, showed the validity of a dynamic approach to the problem of morphogenesis and the importance of studying the relationship between the type of course of the disease and its syndromic characteristics at each stage the development of the disease.

Based on the results of these studies, 3 main forms of the course of schizophrenia were identified: continuous, recurrent (periodic) and paroxysmal-progressive with varying degrees of progression (roughly, medium, and low-progression).

Continuous schizophrenia included cases of the disease with a gradual progressive development of the disease process and a clear distinction between its clinical varieties according to the degree of progression - from sluggish with mild personality changes to grossly progressive with the severity of both positive and negative symptoms. Sluggish schizophrenia is classified as continuous schizophrenia. But given that it has a number of clinical features and in the above sense its diagnosis is less certain, a description of this form is given in the section "Special forms of schizophrenia". This is reflected in the classification below.

The paroxysmal course that distinguishes recurrent, or periodic, schizophrenia is characterized by the presence of phases in the development of the disease with the occurrence of distinct attacks, which brings this form of the disease closer to manic-depressive psychosis, especially since affective disorders occupy a significant place here in the picture of seizures, and personality changes expressed indistinctly.

An intermediate place between the indicated types of flow is occupied by cases when, in the presence of a continuous disease process with neurosis-like, paranoid, psychopathic disorders, the appearance of seizures is noted, the clinical picture of which is determined by syndromes similar to attacks of recurrent schizophrenia or with conditions of a different psychopathological structure characteristic of - progressive schizophrenia.

The above classification of the forms of the course of schizophrenia reflects opposite trends in the development of the disease process - favorable with a characteristic paroxysmal and unfavorable with its inherent continuity. These two tendencies are most pronounced in typical variants of continuous and intermittent (recurrent) schizophrenia, but there are many transitional variants between them, creating a continuum of the course of the disease. This must be taken into account in clinical practice.

Here we present a classification of the forms of the course of schizophrenia, focused not only on the most typical variants of its manifestations, but on atypical, special forms of the disease.

Classification of forms of schizophrenia

continuously flowing

    Malignant juvenile

      hebephrenic

      Catatonic

      paranoid juvenile

    paranoid

      crazy option

      hallucinatory variant

    Sluggish

Paroxysmal-progredient

    Malignant

    Close to paranoid

    Close to sluggish

Recurrent:

    With different types of seizures

    with the same seizures

special shapes

    Sluggish

    Atypical protracted pubertal attack

    paranoid

    Febrile

Since doctors and scientists now quite often have to diagnose schizophrenia not only according to the domestic classification, but also according to ICD-10, we decided to give an appropriate comparison of the forms of the disease (Table 7) according to A. S. Tiganov, G. P. Panteleeva, O.P. Vertogradova et al. (1997). In Table 7 there are some discrepancies with the above classification. They are due to the peculiarities of the ICD-10. In it, for example, among the main forms there is no sluggish schizophrenia distinguished in the domestic classification, although such a form was listed in the ICD-9: heading 295.5 "Slow (low-progressive, latent) schizophrenia" in 5 variants. In the ICD-10, low-grade schizophrenia basically corresponds to "Schizotypal disorder" (F21), which is included in the general rubric "Schizotypal and delusional disorders" (F20-29). In Table 7, among the forms of paroxysmal-progressive schizophrenia, the previously distinguished [Nadzharov R. A., 1983] schizoaffective schizophrenia is left, since in ICD-10 it corresponds to a number of distinguished conditions, taking into account the forms (types) of the course of the disease. In this Guide, schizoaffective schizophrenia is classified as schizoaffective psychosis and is discussed in Chapter 3 of this section. In the Guide to Psychiatry, edited by A.V. Snezhnevsky (1983), schizoaffective psychoses were not distinguished. ”

Table 7. Schizophrenia: comparison of ICD-10 diagnostic criteria and Russian classification

Domestic taxonomy of the forms of the course of schizophrenia

I. Continuous schizophrenia

1. Schizophrenia, continuous course

a) malignant catatonic variant ("lucid" catatonia, hebephrenic)

a) catatonic schizophrenia hebephrenic schizophrenia

hallucinatory-delusional variant (juvenile paranoid)

undifferentiated schizophrenia with a predominance of paranoid disorders

simple form

simple schizophrenia

final state

residual schizophrenia, continuous

b) paranoid schizophrenia

paranoid schizophrenia (paranoid stage)

paranoid schizophrenia, delusional disorder

delusional version

paranoid schizophrenia, chronic delusional disorder

hallucinatory variant

paranoid schizophrenia, other psychotic disorders (chronic hallucinatory psychosis)

incomplete remission

paranoid schizophrenia, other chronic delusional disorders, residual schizophrenia, incomplete remission

F20.00+ F22.8+ F20.54

II. Attack-like progredient (fur-like) schizophrenia

II. Schizophrenia, episodic with progressive defect

a) malignant with a predominance of catatonic disorders (including "lucid" and hebephrenic variants)

a) catatonic (hebephrenic) schizophrenia

with a predominance of paranoid disorders

paranoid schizophrenia

with polymorphic manifestations (affective-catatonic-hallucinatory-delusional)

schizophrenia undifferentiated

b) paranoid (progredient)

b) paranoid schizophrenia

delusional version

paranoid schizophrenia, other acute delusional psychotic disorders

hallucinatory remission

paranoid schizophrenia, other acute psychotic disorders paranoid schizophrenia, episodic course with a stable defect, with incomplete remission

F20.02+ F23.8+ F20.02+ F20.04

c) schizoaffective

c) schizophrenia, episodic type of course with a stable defect. schizoaffective disorder

depressive-delusional (depressive-catatonic) attack

schizoaffective disorder, depressive type, episodic schizophrenia, stable defect, acute polymorphic psychotic disorder with symptoms of schizophrenia

F20.x2(F20.22)+ F25.1+ F23.1

manic-delusional (manic-catatonic) attack

schizoaffective disorder, manic type, schizophrenia with episodic course and with a stable defect, acute polymorphic, psychotic disorder with symptoms of schizophrenia

F20.x2(F20.22)+ F25.0+ F23.1

thymopathic remission (with "acquired" cyclothymia)

schizophrenia, incomplete remission, post-schizophrenic depression, cyclothymia

III. Recurrent schizophrenia

III. Schizophrenia, episodic relapsing course

oneiroid-catatonic seizure

schizophrenia catatonic, acute polymorphic psychotic disorder without symptoms of schizophrenia

acute sensual delirium (intermetamorphosis, acute fantastic delirium)

schizophrenia, acute polymorphic psychotic disorder without symptoms of schizophrenia

acute delusional state of the type of acute hallucinosis and acute Kandinsky-Clerambault syndrome

schizophrenia, acute psychotic condition with symptoms of schizophrenia

acute paranoid

schizophrenia, other acute, predominantly delusional, psychotic disorders

circular schizophrenia

schizophrenia, other manic episode (other depressive episodes atypical depression)

F20.x3+ F30.8 (or F32.8)

remission without productive disorders

schizophrenia, complete remission

Schizophrenia is equally common among both sexes.

The issue of the prevalence of the disease is very complicated due to the different principles of diagnosis in different countries and different regions within the same country, the lack of a single complete theory of schizophrenia. The average prevalence is about 1% in the population, or 0.55%. There are data on more frequent incidence among the urban population.

In general, the diagnostic boundaries between different forms of schizophrenia are somewhat vague, and ambiguity can and does occur. Nevertheless, the classification carried out has been preserved since the early 1900s, since it turned out to be useful both for predicting the outcome of the disease and for describing it.

Psychological features of patients with schizophrenia

Since the time of E. Kretschmer, schizophrenia has been associated with a schizoid personality type, which in the most typical cases is characterized by introversion, a tendency to abstract thinking, emotional coldness and restraint in the manifestations of feelings, combined with an obsession in the implementation of certain dominant aspirations and hobbies. But as they studied the various forms of the course of schizophrenia, psychiatrists moved away from such generalized characteristics of premorbid patients, which turned out to be very different in different clinical forms of the disease [Nadzharov R. A., 1983].

There are 7 types of premorbid personality traits in patients with schizophrenia: 1) hyperthymic personalities with features of immaturity in the emotional sphere and a tendency to daydreaming and fantasizing; 2) sthenic schizoids; 3) sensitive schizoids; 4) dissociated, or mosaic, schizoids; 5) excitable personalities; 6) "exemplary" personalities; 7) deficit personalities.

A premorbid personality type of a hyperthymic type has been described in patients with a paroxysmal form of schizophrenia. Stenic schizoids are found in its various forms. Sensitive schizoids are described both in paroxysmal forms of schizophrenia and in its sluggish course. The personality warehouse of the type of dissociated schizoids is characteristic of sluggish schizophrenia. Excitable personalities are found in various forms of the disease (with paroxysmal, paranoid and sluggish). Types of "exemplary" and deficient personalities are especially characteristic of forms of malignant juvenile schizophrenia.

Significant progress in the study of premorbid was achieved after the establishment of the psychological characteristics of patients, in particular, in identifying the structure of the schizophrenic defect.

Interest in the psychology of patients with schizophrenia arose long ago due to the peculiarity of mental disorders in this disease, in particular due to the unusual nature of cognitive processes and the inability to evaluate them in accordance with the known criteria of dementia. It was noted that the thinking, speech and perception of patients are unusual and paradoxical, which have no analogy among other known types of the corresponding mental pathology. Most authors pay attention to a special dissociation that characterizes not only cognitive, but also the entire mental activity and behavior of patients. So, patients with schizophrenia can perform complex types of intellectual activity, but often experience difficulty in solving simple tasks. Often, their ways of acting, inclinations and hobbies are also paradoxical.

Psychological studies have shown that disturbances in cognitive activity in schizophrenia occur at all its levels, starting from the direct sensory reflection of reality, i.e., perception. Different properties of the surrounding world are distinguished by patients in a slightly different way than healthy ones: they are “accentuated” in different ways, which leads to a decrease in the efficiency and “economics” of the perception process. However, at the same time, an increase in the “perceptual accuracy” of the perception of the image is noted.

The most clearly marked features of cognitive processes appear in the thinking of patients. It was found that in schizophrenia there is a tendency to actualize practically insignificant features of objects and a decrease in the level of selectivity due to the regulatory influence of past experience on mental activity. At the same time, the indicated pathology of mental, as well as speech activity and visual perception, designated as dissociation, appears especially clearly in those types of activity, the implementation of which is significantly determined by social factors, that is, it involves reliance on past social experience. In the same types of activity, where the role of social mediation is insignificant, no violations are found.

The activity of patients with schizophrenia due to a decrease in social orientation and the level of social regulation is characterized by a deterioration in selectivity, but in this regard, patients with schizophrenia can in some cases "win", experiencing less difficulty than healthy people, if necessary, to discover "latent" knowledge or discover new ones in the subject. properties. However, the "loss" is immeasurably greater, since in the vast majority of everyday situations, a decrease in selectivity reduces the effectiveness of patients' activities. The decrease in selectivity is at the same time the foundation of "original" and unusual thinking and perception of patients, allowing them to consider phenomena and objects from different angles, compare the incomparable, move away from patterns. There are many facts confirming the presence of special abilities and inclinations in persons of the schizoid circle and patients with schizophrenia, allowing them to achieve success in certain areas of creativity. It is these features that gave rise to the problem of "genius and insanity."

By a decrease in the selective actualization of knowledge, patients significantly differ from healthy ones, who, according to premorbid features, belong to sthenic, mosaic, and hyperthymic schizoids. An intermediate position in this respect is occupied by sensitive and excitable schizoids. These changes are uncharacteristic for patients referred in premorbid to deficient and "exemplary" personalities.

Features of the selectivity of cognitive activity in speech are as follows: in patients with schizophrenia, there is a weakening of the social determination of the process of speech perception and a decrease in the actualization of speech connections based on past experience.

In the literature, for a relatively long time, there is evidence of the similarity of the "general cognitive style" of thinking and speech of patients with schizophrenia and their relatives, in particular parents. The data obtained by Yu. F. Polyakov et al. (1983, 1991), during experimental psychological studies conducted at the Scientific Center for Mental Health of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, indicate that among the relatives of mentally healthy patients with schizophrenia there is a significant accumulation of individuals with varying degrees of severity of cognitive activity anomalies, especially in cases where they are characterized by personality traits similar to probands. In the light of these data, the problem of “genius and insanity” also looks different, which should be considered as an expression of the constitutional nature of the identified changes in thinking (and perception) that contribute to the creative process.

In a number of recent works, some psychological characteristics are considered as factors of predisposition (“vulnerability”), on the basis of which schizophrenic episodes can occur due to stress. As such factors, employees of the New York group L. Erlenmeyer-Kimung, who have been studying high-risk children for schizophrenia for many years, identify a lack of information processes, attention dysfunction, impaired communication and interpersonal functioning, low academic and social “competence”.

The general result of such studies is the conclusion that the deficiency of a number of mental processes and behavioral reactions characterizes both the patients with schizophrenia themselves and those with an increased risk of developing this disease, i.e., the corresponding features can be considered as predictors of schizophrenia.

The peculiarity of cognitive activity revealed in patients with schizophrenia, which consists in a decrease in the selective actualization of knowledge, does not. is a consequence of the development of the disease. It is formed before the manifestation of the latter, predispositionally. This is evidenced by the absence of a direct relationship between the severity of this anomaly and the main indicators of the movement of the schizophrenic process, primarily its progression.

Note that in the course of the disease process, a number of characteristics of cognitive activity undergo changes. Thus, the productivity and generalization of mental activity, the contextual conditioning of speech processes decrease, the semantic structure of words falls apart, etc. However, such a feature as a decrease in selectivity is not associated with the progression of the disease process. In connection with what has been said in recent years, the psychological structure of a schizophrenic defect, the pathopsychological syndrome of a schizophrenic defect, has attracted especially great attention. In the formation of the latter, two trends are distinguished - the formation of a partial, or dissociated, on the one hand, and a total, or pseudo-organic defect, on the other [Kritskaya V.P., Meleshko T.K., Polyakov Yu.F., 1991]..

The leading component in the formation of a partial, dissociated type of defect is a decrease in the need-motivational characteristics of social regulation of activity and behavior. The insufficiency of this component of mental activity leads to a decrease in the social orientation and activity of the individual, to a lack of communication, social emotions, limits reliance on social standards and reduces the level of activity mainly in those areas that require reliance on past social experience and social criteria. The level of regulation remains quite high in these patients in those types of activities and in situations where the role of the social factor is relatively small. This creates a picture of dissociation and partial manifestation of mental disorders in these patients.

In the formation of this type of defect, which is designated as total, pseudo-organic, the decrease in the need-motivational component of mental activity comes to the fore, which manifests itself globally and covers all or most types of mental activity, which characterizes the patient's behavior as a whole. Such a total deficit of mental activity leads, first of all, to a sharp decrease in initiative in all spheres of mental activity, a narrowing of the range of interests, a decrease in the level of its arbitrary regulation and creative activity. Along with this, the formal-dynamic performance indicators are deteriorating, and the level of generalization is decreasing. It should be emphasized that a number of specific characteristics of a schizophrenic defect, which are so pronounced in the dissociated type of the latter, tend to smooth out due to a global decrease in mental activity. It is significant that this decrease is not a consequence of exhaustion, but is due to the insufficiency of need-motivational factors in the determination of mental activity.

In the pathopsychological syndromes that characterize different types of defect, both common and different features can be distinguished. Their common feature is the reduction of the need-motivational components of the social regulation of mental activity. This insufficiency is manifested by violations of the main components of the leading component of the psychological syndrome: in a decrease in the level of communication of social emotions, the level of self-awareness, and the selectivity of cognitive activity. These features are most pronounced with a defect of the partial type - a kind of dissociation of mental disorders occurs. The leading component of the second type of defect, pseudo-organic, is a violation of the need-motivational characteristics of mental activity, leading to a total decrease in mainly all types and parameters of mental activity. In this picture of a general decrease in the level of mental activity, only separate “islands” of preserved mental activity associated with the interests of patients can be noted. Such a total decrease smooths out the manifestations of dissociation of mental activity.

In patients, there is a close connection between negative changes characterizing a partial defect and constitutionally determined, premorbid personality traits. During the painful process, these features are modified: some of them deepen even more, and some smooth out. It is no coincidence that a number of authors have given this type of defect the name of a defect in the schizoid structure. In the formation of the second type of defect with a predominance of pseudo-organic disorders, along with the influence of constitutional factors, a more pronounced relationship with the factors of the disease process, primarily with its progression, is revealed.

An analysis of a schizophrenic defect from the standpoint of a pathopsychological syndrome makes it possible to substantiate the main principles of corrective actions for the purpose of social and labor adaptation and rehabilitation of patients, according to which the insufficiency of some components of the syndrome is partially compensated for by others, which are relatively more intact. Thus, the lack of emotional and social regulation of activity and behavior can be compensated to a certain extent in a conscious way on the basis of voluntary and volitional regulation of activity. The lack of need-motivational characteristics of communication can be overcome to some extent by including patients in specially organized joint activities with a clearly defined goal. The motivating stimulation used in these conditions does not appeal directly to the patient's feelings, but implies an awareness of the need to be oriented towards a partner, without which the task cannot be solved at all, i.e. compensation is achieved in these cases also due to the patient's intellectual and volitional efforts. One of the tasks of correction is to generalize and consolidate positive motivations created in specific situations that contribute to their transition into stable personal characteristics.

Genetics of schizophrenia

(M. E. Vartanyan/V. I. Trubnikov)

Population studies of schizophrenia - the study of its prevalence and distribution among the population made it possible to establish the main pattern - the relative similarity of the prevalence of this disease in mixed populations of different countries. Where the registration and detection of cases meet modern requirements, the prevalence of endogenous psychoses is approximately the same.

For hereditary endogenous diseases, in particular for schizophrenia, high rates of their prevalence in the population are characteristic. At the same time, a reduced birth rate has been established in families of patients with schizophrenia.

The lower reproductive capacity of the latter, explained by their long stay in the hospital and separation from the family, a large number of divorces, spontaneous abortions and other factors, other things being equal, would inevitably lead to a decrease in the incidence rate in the population. However, according to the results of population-epidemiological studies, the expected decrease in the number of patients with endogenous psychoses in the population does not occur. In this regard, a number of researchers suggested the existence of mechanisms that balance the process of elimination from the population of schizophrenic genotypes. It was assumed that heterozygous carriers (some relatives of patients), in contrast to patients with schizophrenia themselves, have a number of selective advantages, in particular, increased reproductive ability compared to the norm. Indeed, it has been proven that the birth rate of children in first-degree relatives of patients is higher than the average birth rates in this population group. Another genetic hypothesis that explains the high prevalence of endogenous psychoses in the population postulates the high hereditary and clinical heterogeneity of this group of diseases. In other words, the grouping under one name of diseases that are different in nature leads to an artificial overestimation of the prevalence of the disease as a whole.

A study of the families of probands suffering from schizophrenia convincingly showed the accumulation of cases of psychosis and personality anomalies, or “schizophrenic spectrum disorders” in them [Shakhmatova IV, 1972]. In addition to pronounced cases of manifest psychosis in families of patients with schizophrenia, many authors described a wide range of transitional forms of the disease and the clinical variety of intermediate options (sluggish course of the disease, schizoid psychopathy, etc.).

To this should be added some features of the structure of cognitive processes described in the previous section, which are characteristic of both patients and their relatives, are usually evaluated as constitutional factors predisposing to the development of the disease [Kritskaya V.P., Meleshko T.K., Polyakov Yu.F. , 1991].

The risk of developing schizophrenia in parents of patients is 14%, in brothers and sisters - 15-16%, in children of sick parents - 10-12%, in uncles and aunts - 5-6%.

There are data on the dependence of the nature of mental anomalies within the family on the type of course of the disease in the proband (Table 8).

Table 8. The frequency of mental anomalies in first-degree relatives of probands with various forms of schizophrenia (in percent)

Table 8 shows that among the relatives of a proband suffering from continuous-current schizophrenia, cases of psychopathy (especially of the schizoid type) accumulate. The number of secondary cases of manifest psychoses with a malignant course is much less. The reverse distribution of psychoses and personality anomalies is observed in families of probands with recurrent schizophrenia. Here the number of manifest cases is almost equal to the number of cases of psychopathy. These data indicate that the genotypes predisposing to the development of continuous and recurrent course of schizophrenia differ significantly from each other.

Many mental anomalies, as if transitional forms between the norm and severe pathology in families of patients with endogenous psychoses, led to the formulation of an important question for genetics about the clinical continuum. The continuum of the first type is determined by multiple transitional forms from complete health to manifest forms of continuous schizophrenia. It consists of schizothymia and schizoid psychopathy of varying severity, as well as latent, reduced forms of schizophrenia. The second type of clinical continuum is transitional forms from the norm to recurrent schizophrenia and affective psychoses. In these cases, the continuum is determined by the psychopathy of the cycloid circle and cyclothymia. Finally, between the very polar, "pure" forms of the course of schizophrenia (continuous and recurrent), there is a range of transitional forms of the disease (paroxysmal-progredient schizophrenia, its schizoaffective variant, etc.), which can also be designated as a continuum. The question arises about the genetic nature of this continuum. If the phenotypic variability of the manifestations of endogenous psychoses reflects the genotypic diversity of the mentioned forms of schizophrenia, then we should expect a certain discrete number of genotypic variants of these diseases, providing "smooth" transitions from one form to another.

Genetic-correlation analysis made it possible to quantify the contribution of genetic factors to the development of the studied forms of endogenous psychoses (Table 9). The heritability index (h 2) for endogenous psychoses varies within relatively narrow limits (50-74%). Genetic correlations between forms of the disease have also been determined. As can be seen from Table 9, the genetic correlation coefficient (r) between continuous and recurrent forms of schizophrenia is almost minimal (0.13). This means that the total number of genes included in the genotypes that predispose to the development of these forms is very small. This coefficient reaches its maximum (0.78) values ​​when comparing the recurrent form of schizophrenia with manic-depressive psychosis, which indicates an almost identical genotype predisposing to the development of these two forms of psychosis. In the paroxysmal-progredient form of schizophrenia, a partial genetic correlation is found with both the continuous and recurrent forms of the disease. All these patterns indicate that each of the mentioned forms of endogenous psychoses has a different genetic commonality in relation to each other. This commonality arises indirectly, due to genetic loci common to the genotypes of the corresponding forms. At the same time, there are also differences between them in terms of loci, which are characteristic only for the genotypes of each individual form.

Table 9. Genetic-correlation analysis of the main clinical forms of endogenous psychoses (h 2 - heritability coefficient, r g - genetic correlation coefficient)

Clinical form of the disease

Continuous schizophrenia

Recurrent schizophrenia

Continuous schizophrenia

Paroxysmal progressive schizophrenia

Recurrent schizophrenia

Affective insanity

Thus, the polar variants of endogenous psychoses are genetically most significantly different - Continuous schizophrenia, on the one hand, recurrent schizophrenia and manic-depressive psychosis, on the other. Paroxysmal-progressive schizophrenia is clinically the most polymorphic, genotypically also more complex and, depending on the predominance of elements of a continuous or periodic course in the clinical picture, contains certain groups of genetic loci. However, the existence of a continuum at the genotype level requires more detailed evidence.

The presented results of genetic analysis led to the emergence of issues that are important for clinical psychiatry in theoretical and practical terms. First of all, this is a nosological assessment of the group of endogenous psychoses. The difficulties here are that their various forms, while having common genetic factors, at the same time (at least some of them) differ significantly from each other. From this point of view, it would be more correct to designate this group as a nosological "class" or "genus" of diseases.

Developed ideas make us consider the problem of heterogeneity of diseases with hereditary predisposition in a new way [Vartanyan M. E., Snezhnevsky A. V., 1976]. Endogenous psychoses belonging to this group do not meet the requirements of classical genetic heterogeneity, proven for typical cases of monomutant hereditary diseases, where the disease is determined by a single locus, i.e., one or another of its allelic variants. The hereditary heterogeneity of endogenous psychoses is determined by significant differences in the constellations of different groups of genetic loci that predispose to certain forms of the disease. Consideration of such mechanisms of hereditary heterogeneity of endogenous psychoses allows us to evaluate the different role of environmental factors in the development of the disease. It becomes clear why in some cases the manifestation of the disease (recurrent schizophrenia, affective psychosis) often requires external, provoking factors, in others (continuous schizophrenia) the development of the disease occurs as if spontaneously, without significant environmental influence.

The decisive moment in the study of genetic heterogeneity will be the identification of the primary products of genetic loci involved in the hereditary structure, predispositions, and the assessment of their pathogenetic effects. In this case, the concept of "hereditary heterogeneity of endogenous psychoses" will receive a specific biological content, which will allow targeted therapeutic correction of the corresponding shifts.

One of the main directions in studying the role of heredity in the development of schizophrenia is the search for their genetic markers. Under markers, it is customary to understand those signs (biochemical, immunological, physiological, etc.) that distinguish patients or their relatives from healthy ones and are under genetic control, that is, they are an element of a hereditary predisposition to the development of the disease.

Many biological disorders found in patients with schizophrenia are more common in their relatives than in the control group of mentally healthy individuals. Such disorders were detected in a part of mentally healthy relatives. This phenomenon was demonstrated, in particular, for membranotropic, as well as for neurotropic and antithymic factors in the blood serum of patients with schizophrenia, whose heritability coefficient (h 2) is 64, 51 and 64, respectively, and the genetic correlation index with a predisposition to the manifestation of psychosis is 0, eight; 0.55 and 0.25. Recently, indicators obtained from CT of the brain have been very widely used as markers, since many studies have shown that some of them reflect a predisposition to the disease.

The obtained results are consistent with the concept of genetic heterogeneity of schizophrenic psychoses. At the same time, these data do not allow us to consider the entire group of psychoses of the schizophrenic spectrum as the result of a phenotypic manifestation of a single genetic cause (in accordance with simple models of monogenic determination). Nevertheless, the development of a marker strategy in the study of the genetics of endogenous psychoses should continue, as it can be the scientific basis for medical genetic counseling and the identification of high-risk groups.

Twin studies have played a large role in studying the "contribution" of hereditary factors in the etiology of many chronic non-communicable diseases. They were started in the 20s. Currently, in clinics and laboratories around the world there is a large sample of twins suffering from mental illness [Moskalenko VD, 1980; Gottesman I. I., Shields J. A., 1967, Kringlen E., 1968; Fischer M. et al, 1969; Pollin W. et al, 1969; Tienari P., 1971]. Analysis of the concordance of identical and fraternal twins (OB and BD) for schizophrenia showed that concordance in OB reaches 44%, and in BD - 13%.

The concordance varies significantly and depends on many factors - the age of the twins, the clinical form and severity of the disease, the clinical criteria for the condition, etc. These features determine the large difference in the published results: the concordance in the OB groups ranges from 14 to 69%, in the DB groups - from 0 to 28%. None of the diseases concordance in pairs of AB does not reach 100%. It is generally accepted that this indicator reflects the contribution of genetic factors to the occurrence of human diseases. Discordance between OBs, on the contrary, is determined by environmental influences. However, there are a number of difficulties in interpreting twin concordance data for mental illness. First of all, according to the observations of psychologists, one cannot exclude "mutual psychic induction", which is more pronounced in OB than in DB. It is known that OBs tend more towards mutual imitation in many areas of activity, and this makes it difficult to unambiguously determine the quantitative contribution of genetic and environmental factors to the similarity of OBs.

The twin approach should be combined with all other methods of genetic analysis, including molecular biology.

In the clinical genetics of schizophrenia, when studying the relationship between hereditary and external factors in the development of mental illness, the most common approach is the study of "adopted children - parents." Children in early childhood are separated from biological parents with schizophrenia and transferred to families of mentally healthy people. Thus, a child with a hereditary predisposition to mental illness enters a normal environment and is brought up by mentally healthy people (adoptive parents). With this method, S. Kety et al. (1976) and other researchers convincingly proved the essential role of hereditary factors in the etiology of endogenous psychoses. Children whose biological parents suffered from schizophrenia who grew up in families of mentally healthy people showed symptoms of the disease with the same frequency as children left in families with schizophrenia. Thus, studies of "adopted children - parents" in psychiatry allowed to reject objections to the genetic basis of psychosis. The primacy of psychogenesis in the origin of this group of diseases was not confirmed in these studies.

In recent decades, another direction of genetic research in schizophrenia has been formed, which can be defined as the study of "high-risk groups". These are special multi-year follow-up projects for children born to parents with schizophrenia. The most famous are the studies of V. Fish and the New York High Risk Project, which has been carried out at the Institute of Psychiatry in the State of New York since the late 60s. B. Fish have been established phenomena of dysontogenesis in children from high-risk groups (for a detailed presentation, see Volume 2, Section VIII, Chapter 4). The children observed in the New York project have now reached adolescence and adulthood. According to neurophysiological and psychological (psychometric) indicators, a number of signs reflecting the characteristics of cognitive processes were established, characterizing not only mentally ill, but also practically healthy individuals from a high-risk group, which can serve as predictors of the onset of schizophrenia. This makes it possible to use them to identify contingents of people in need of appropriate preventive measures.

Literature

1. Depression and depersonalization - Nuller Yu.L. Address: Scientific Center for Mental Health of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, 2001-2008 http://www.psychiatry.ru

2. Endogenous mental illness - Tiganov A.S. (ed.) Address: Scientific Center for Mental Health of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, 2001-2008 http://www.psychiatry.ru

3. MP Kononova (Guidelines for the psychological study of mentally ill children of school age (From the experience of a psychologist in a children's psychiatric hospital). - M .: State Publishing House of Medical Literature, 1963.S.81-127).

4. "Psychophysiology" ed. Yu. I. Aleksandrova

Speaking professionally, the term " mild form' is not quite correct. This disease can change a person's personality beyond recognition, even in its mildest manifestations. Nevertheless, this phrase can often be found in the anamnesis of patients in neuropsychiatric clinics. Therefore, it is necessary to explain what is meant by it.

Place in the modern classification of diseases

In the previous international classification of diseases (ICD-9), there was a definition of indolent (or low-progressive) schizophrenia, which in the current ICD-10 was replaced by the term "schizotypal disorder". It includes neurosis-like, psychopathic, latent schizophrenia and schizotypal personality disorder. Moreover, the latter term is more often used in the English-language psychiatric literature than in the domestic one.

Diagnosis of schizotypal disorder or mild form of schizophrenia a psychiatrist can put a patient when he has some of the characteristic symptoms of the disease. However, in terms of their totality and degree of manifestation, they are not enough to make a diagnosis of schizophrenia.

As a rule, such patients do not have pronounced delusions and hallucinations, or they are rudimentary and are not decisive in the clinical picture of the disease. There is also no progression of the course of the disease, which is characteristic of more severe forms of schizophrenia, and such pronounced deficient changes are not formed.

Symptoms

In order to make a diagnosis such as mild form of schizophrenia, the physician must verify that the patient has had 3 or 4 of the following symptoms for at least two years:

  • Strangeness, eccentricity in behavior and appearance.
  • Views that do not correspond to the dominant culture and religion.
  • A tendency towards symbolic or magical thinking.
  • Thought disorders are not characterized by pronounced structural changes, but a tendency to fruitless reasoning (reasoning), pretentiousness, and stereotyping prevails.
  • Scarcity of emotions, inadequate emotional reactions, self-isolation from others.
  • Depersonalization and derealization phenomena.
  • Obsessive states, which the patient does not try to resist.
  • Dysmorphophobic (associated with the belief in the presence of a disfiguring physical defect), hypochondriacal, aggressive and sexual thoughts predominate.
  • Suspicion (up to).
  • Passivity, lack of initiative, lack of a fruitful result from mental activity.

Brad, at mild form of schizophrenia may appear sporadically in a rudimentary form and do not reach the signs of a clinically delineated psychosis. Sometimes these symptoms may precede the development of severe forms of schizophrenia, most often paranoid.

The outstanding Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleiler, who introduced the term “mind splitting” into psychiatric science, believed that there were much more mild and even latent forms of schizophrenia than clearly clinically defined forms. On closer examination, many neurotics might fall under this diagnosis. This opinion also prevailed in Soviet psychiatry, however, this theory is now being questioned.

Distinguishing a psychopathic schizophrenic from a patient suffering from schizoid or paranoid personality disorder can be quite difficult. That is, to the diagnosis of the schizophrenic spectrum, including mild form of schizophrenia, must be approached carefully.

Diseases of the nervous system are quite common in people with a hereditary predisposition. Most of them are treatable, after which the person returns to a full life. But, this is what schizophrenia is and whether it is possible to get rid of it completely or not, unfortunately, even a qualified doctor still cannot answer these questions accurately. But the fact that this disease leads to a complete loss of ability to work has been proven repeatedly.

Schizophrenia is one of the most dangerous ailments of the nervous system, which suppresses the will of the patient, which ultimately leads to a deterioration in the quality of his life. However, in some cases, the development of pathology can be suspended, preventing disability. The types of schizophrenia and, accordingly, its forms can be different, and they differ significantly from each other, but psychiatrists say that this disease is not one ailment, but several types of illness.

Despite the observations and research of specialists, the origin of the syndrome has not been fully established. Therefore, schizophrenia and its symptoms are still a hot topic. And in the common people, this disease is known under such a name as “split personality” (due to the patient’s behavior, the illogicality of his thinking). Most often, the early symptoms of pathology make themselves felt at the age of 15-25 years, and in the absence of adequate therapy, they rapidly progress.

The main role in the appearance of the disease is played by the hereditary factor. External causes (disorders of the psyche, nervous system, past illnesses, head injuries, etc.) are only of secondary importance and are only an activator of the pathological process.

How does the insidious syndrome manifest itself?

Experts are cautious about the study of schizophrenia and the final definition of this diagnosis. A wide range of possible disorders is being investigated: neurosis-like and mental.

Among the emotional symptoms of the disease, the main signs are:

  • Prostration - a person has complete indifference in the fate of people close to him.
  • Inappropriate behavior is also present - in some cases there is a strong reaction to various stimuli: every trifle can cause aggression, attacks of inadequate jealousy, anger. They suffer, and from this native people. With strangers, the patient behaves as usual. The first signs of schizophrenia are the loss of interest in everyday activities, things.
  • Dullness of instinct - a person suddenly has a loss of food, he has no desire to lead a normal life, to monitor his appearance. All syndromes of schizophrenia are also accompanied by delusions, manifested in the wrong perception of everything that is happening around.
  • The patient sees strange colored dreams, he is haunted by obsessive thoughts that someone is constantly watching him, wants to deal with him in sophisticated ways. The patient is trying to convict his other half of treason (while his behavior in schizophrenia is obsessive).
  • Hallucinations - often such a disorder makes itself felt in the form of hearing impairment: the patient hears extraneous voices that prompt him with various ideas. The patient may also be disturbed by visual color hallucinations resembling a dream.
  • Disturbance of normal thinking. A disease such as schizophrenia, the main symptoms and signs of which are often quite difficult to identify, is accompanied by deviations in the thought process. One of the most serious violations is disorganization in the perception of various information, in which the person’s logic is completely absent. Speech is lost in connection, sometimes it is impossible to make out what the patient is saying.

Another sign is a delay in the thought process (the person cannot finish his story). If you ask the patient why he suddenly stopped, he will not be able to answer this question.

  • Movement disorders. The causes of schizophrenia may be different, but regardless of its origin, the patient often has involuntary, awkward and scattered movements, strange mannerisms, and various grimaces. The patient can systematically repeat certain actions or fall into prostration - a state of immunity, complete immobility.

If there is no treatment for schizophrenia, then the catatonic syndrome is the first symptom observed in a person. Thanks to modern therapeutic techniques, this phenomenon is quite rare.

If the first signs of schizophrenia are almost impossible to detect at the initial stage of the pathology, then it is impossible to lose sight of hallucinations and delusions.

In families where bouts of unjustified jealousy and scandals, aggression, depression are constantly present, many refer to mental disorders, and only in the last place, relatives begin to think that this is schizophrenia, the main symptoms and signs of which are not yet so pronounced. But with a good relationship, the disease is easy to identify in the initial stages of its development.

The main forms of the syndrome

Specialists identify the main types of schizophrenia and, accordingly, its forms.

Name Characteristic symptoms
paranoid pathologyHow to recognize a schizophrenic in this case? The disease is accompanied by unrealistic ideas, combined with hallucinations from the organs of hearing. Pathologies from the emotional and volitional areas are milder than with other types of illness.
Hebephrenic type of syndromeThe disease begins at a young age. Therefore, it is important to be aware of what schizophrenia is and how to recognize it in order to prevent the further development of the pathological process. With this type of illness, numerous mental disorders are noted: hallucinations, as well as delirium, the patient's behavior can be unpredictable. Diagnosis of schizophrenia in this case is carried out quite quickly.
Catatonic type of pathologyPsychomotor disorders are quite pronounced, with constant fluctuations from an excited state to complete apathy. Whether schizophrenia is curable in this case or not, doctors find it difficult to answer. With this type of disease, negative behavior and submission to certain circumstances are often encountered. Catatonia may be accompanied by vivid visual hallucinations, obscurations of adequate consciousness. How to remove the diagnosis of schizophrenia in the presence of such symptoms, experts are still thinking.
residual syndromeThe chronic stage of the pathological process, in which negative symptoms are often present: a decrease in activity, psychomotor retardation, passivity, lack of emotions, poverty of speech, a person loses initiative. How such schizophrenia is treated and whether it is possible to eliminate negative factors for a certain period of time, only a specialist can answer after a thorough examination of the patient.
simple diseaseAnother type of pathology, with a latent, but rapid development of the process: strange behavior, lack of ability to lead a socially adequate standard of living, decreased physical activity. There are no episodes of acute psychosis. A disease such as schizophrenia is dangerous, how to treat it can be found out only after an examination.

Schizophrenic psychosis and "split personality" are two types of pathology, the course of which is sometimes similar. Clinical signs, most likely, act as additional symptoms of the syndrome, which may not appear. Psychosis is dominated by hallucinations and delusions. Schizophrenia is treatable (you can stop its progression), but for this it is necessary to recognize it in a timely manner.

Alcohol syndrome: signs

This pathology, as such, does not exist, but the systematic use of alcohol can trigger the mechanism for the development of the disease. The state in which a person is after a long "binge" is called psychosis and is a mental illness and does not apply to schizophrenia. But because of inadequate behavior, people call this disease alcoholic schizophrenia.

Psychosis after prolonged alcohol consumption can occur in several ways:

  1. Delirium tremens - appears after giving up alcohol and is characterized by the fact that a person begins to see various animals, devils, living beings, strange objects. In addition, he does not understand what is happening to him and where he is. In this case, schizophrenia is curable - you just need to stop abusing alcohol.
  2. Hallucinosis - appear during prolonged alcohol consumption. The patient is disturbed by visions of an accusatory or threatening nature. Is schizophrenia treatable or not? Yes, in this case, you can get rid of it, after proper therapy.
  3. Delusional syndrome - observed with systematic, prolonged consumption of alcohol. Characterized by poisoning attempts, harassment and jealousy.

A disease such as schizophrenia is dangerous and the causes of its occurrence in this case play a special role, since after giving up alcohol and appropriate treatment, you can get rid of the pathology forever.

How to establish the presence of a "split personality"?

Schizophrenia and its diagnosis play a special role in a patient's life. Therefore, it is necessary to establish the presence of an ailment in a timely manner. According to the established rules, the examination is carried out according to certain criteria and in sufficient detail. First, primary information is collected, including a medical survey, complaints, and the nature of the development of the disease.

What kind of disease it is and the main reasons for the rapid development of schizophrenia can be found using the main diagnostic methods:

  1. Special testing of psychological orientation. This technique is informative at the initial stages of the disease.
  2. MRI of the brain - through this procedure, the presence of certain disorders in the patient (encephalitis, hemorrhage, malignant neoplasms) that can affect a person's behavior is revealed. Since the symptoms of the disease, regardless of the type of disease, are somewhat similar to the signs of organic brain disorders.
  3. Electroencephalography - establishes injuries, pathologies of the brain.
  4. Research in the laboratory: biochemistry, urinalysis, hormonal status, as well as an immunogram.

To determine the exact diagnosis, additional examination methods are used: arterial examination, sleep study, virological diagnostics. It is only possible to finally identify the manifestation of a "split personality" and prescribe an adequate treatment for schizophrenia if a person has signs of the syndrome for six months. Must establish at least one overt, as well as several vague symptoms:

  • violation of the normal thought process, in which the patient believes that his thoughts do not belong to him;
  • feeling of influence from the outside: the belief that all actions are carried out under the direction of an outsider;
  • inadequate perception of behavior or speech;
  • hallucinations: olfactory, auditory, visual, and also tactile;
  • obsessive thoughts (for example, excessive jealousy);
  • confusion of consciousness, failures of motor functions: restlessness or stupor.

With a comprehensive examination of the pathology, every tenth patient is misdiagnosed, since the causes of schizophrenia, as well as its manifestation, can be different, so it is not always possible to identify a dangerous illness in a timely manner.

How to provide adequate therapy

Most psychiatrists suggest that the treatment of schizophrenia, that is, the stage of its exacerbation, is best done in a hospital, especially with the first mental disorder. Of course, the hospital should be well equipped and use only modern methods of diagnosis and therapy. Only in this case it is possible to obtain a more accurate picture of the disease, as well as to select the appropriate methods of treatment for schizophrenia.

But do not forget that being in a hospital is stressful for a patient, because it completely limits his freedom of action. Therefore, hospitalization must be fully justified, the decision must be made taking into account all factors and after exploring other alternatives.

Duration of adequate therapy

Regardless of the type of schizophrenia, the treatment of the disease should be constant and long enough. Often, after the first attack, therapy with psychotropic drugs and antipsychotics is prescribed for several years, and after a second episode - at least five.

About 70% of patients stop taking the medicine, as they feel completely healthy, not realizing that they have just entered the remission stage. Another category of patients suffering from schizophrenia refuses maintenance medications due to lack of effectiveness of therapy, as well as weight gain and drowsiness.

How to prevent possible relapses?

The main task of therapy is the treatment of the disease, aimed at preventing seizures. For these purposes, doctors use prolonged-acting medications: Rispolept-Konsta, Fluanxol-Depot, and only in some cases because of the negative effect on the symptoms of the Clopixol-Depot syndrome.

Supportive therapy should be long-term and carried out under the constant supervision of physicians, taking into account the rate of development of biochemical, hormonal, and neurophysiological parameters, and include psychotherapy sessions with the patient. It is necessary to teach the patient's relatives the tactics of their behavior, which will prevent the recurrence of the disease.

Are people with split personality disorder aggressive?

Patients with a diagnosis such as schizophrenia are practically not prone to psychosis, violence, most often they prefer peace. According to statistics, if the patient has never crossed the boundaries of the law, then even after he has a disease, he will not commit a crime. If someone with a diagnosis of "split personality" behaves aggressively, then often his actions are directed at people close to him and manifest themselves within the home.

The treatment of the “split personality” syndrome is a rather difficult task, both for the public and for physicians. Therefore, the question of whether schizophrenia can be cured remains relevant to this day. Timely therapy and medicines preserve the quality of the patient's habitual lifestyle, ability to work and social level, thereby allowing him to provide for himself and help his loved ones.

Schizophrenia is such a multifaceted disease in its manifestations that it is sometimes quite difficult to recognize it in time. Before the first obvious signs appear, the disease can slowly develop for years, and some oddities that appear in a person’s behavior are mistaken by many for a spoiled character or teenage changes. At the same time, noticing such oddities, people often, instead of going to a psychologist or psychiatrist, run to grandmothers or traditional healers to remove damage, roll out eggs, buy "magic" herbs, etc. Such actions only lead to a worsening of the patient's condition and a delay in professional therapy. But it is precisely the early diagnosis of schizophrenia and timely treatment that can significantly improve the prognosis of the disease and get high chances for a full recovery. What signs make it possible to suspect the approach of the disease and reveal a tendency to schizophrenia?

Signs of schizophrenic disorder at the premorbid stage

Schizophrenia is an endogenous disease and is associated with biochemical disorders of the brain. And pathological processes in the brain cannot but affect the behavior and thinking of a person. In childhood or adolescence, a person who may later develop schizophrenia does not stand out from the rest of the people. However, some signs are still worth paying attention to. Such children are usually a little withdrawn, may experience difficulties in learning. Behind them, you can notice some odd behaviors, for example, washing hands too often, unusual hobbies, coldness towards animals. Of course, the fact that a child is behind in school and behaves introverted does not mean that he will necessarily suffer schizophrenia in the future. It's just that such a child or teenager should be observed more carefully. Consultation with a child psychologist will also not be superfluous.

The incubation period of the disease

As the pathological processes of the brain in schizophrenia worsen, changes in the psyche and thinking become more pronounced. The incubation (prodromal) stage of the disease lasts an average of about three years. Relatives do not always pay attention to gradually increasing oddities in the patient's behavior, especially if this coincides with adolescence. Signs of the disease at this stage, allowing you to understand whether a person has schizophrenia, may be as follows:

  • strange behavioral reactions;
  • desire for solitude, decreased initiative and energy levels;
  • change in handwriting (for example, handwriting may become illegible or the slope of letters in handwriting changes);
  • change in personality traits (a diligent and punctual teenager suddenly becomes absent-minded and careless);
  • deterioration of creative, educational or labor abilities;
  • episodic simple hallucinatory or illusory manifestations;
  • new overvalued hobbies, for example, philosophy, mysticism, religious ideas.

Graphologists believe that it is possible to understand whether there is a predisposition to schizophrenia by the handwriting of a person.

Handwriting can say a lot about personality and thinking patterns. However, in itself illegible and intermittent handwriting does not indicate schizophrenia, there must be other characteristic manifestations of the disease. If you begin to notice a change in handwriting and other signs in yourself or a loved one, you should consult a psychiatrist as soon as possible.

Self-diagnosis

Diagnosing schizophrenia is a difficult task even for experienced professionals. What can we say about trying to find out about the presence of such a complex disease on your own. An accurate diagnosis with determining the form of the disorder can only be made after a series of examinations, differential diagnosis and a conversation with a doctor. However, often people, in view of their negative attitude towards psychiatry and stereotypical beliefs, are afraid to consult a psychiatrist, even if they find themselves having alarming signs. Therefore, many are interested in how to determine schizophrenia in oneself without the help of a psychiatrist? You can figure out if you have a reason to be concerned about schizophrenia with some self-diagnosis techniques.

To get started, try the following statements on yourself:

  • it is difficult for me to remember recent events, but what happened a long time ago is clearly remembered;
  • boredom attacks me from most conversations and new acquaintances are not interesting to me;
  • sometimes it is difficult for me to carry out daily duties;
  • sometimes I have thoughts that I am acting against my will;
  • it can be difficult for me to forget even minor grievances;
  • I often cannot bring myself to leave the house for days on end;
  • I am sometimes attacked by a stupor or sudden excitement with aggression;
  • my thoughts are sometimes hazy and confused;
  • I am sure that I have unique abilities;
  • others try to control my feelings and thoughts;
  • I am not interested in anything, and I do not want to do anything;
  • I feel that my family is under threat;
  • for me, the main adviser is my inner voice, I always consult with him;
  • close people annoy me for unknown reasons;
  • I notice in myself sometimes a discrepancy between the displayed emotions of the environment and the emotions of other people;
  • I often find in myself an unreasonable feeling of fear;
  • it is difficult for me to show a feeling of tenderness and love, I am often immersed in myself.

Think about how true it will be for you to hear the following statements addressed to you from loved ones:

  • you are not at all worried about the suffering of other people or animals, your face does not reflect a feeling of compassion;
  • you do not look into the eyes of the interlocutor;
  • you sometimes talk out loud to yourself;
  • you most of all like to spend time alone with yourself, avoid crowded places and attention from others;
  • you hear what is not really there, and what others do not hear;
  • you began to speak indistinctly (stammer, lisp);
  • you began to write worse, your handwriting is somehow strange and illegible;
  • you are considered a little eccentric, and strange expressions are noticed on your face;
  • you talk to inanimate objects as if they were alive;
  • you sometimes laugh or cry for no reason;
  • you devote quite a lot of time to meaningless activities (lying for hours, staring at the ceiling with your eyes).

How to evaluate such testing? The more of the above statements apply to you, the higher your tendency and predisposition to schizophrenia and the more important it is for you to visit a specialist. Note that it is inclination! Because, even if absolutely all statements are identical to you, this does not mean that you have a schizophrenic disorder. Only a psychiatrist can make a diagnosis.

You can also understand if you have signs of schizophrenia using the Chaplin Mask visual test, created by the British neuropsychologist R. Gregory. The experience of observing patients shows that a characteristic handwriting of schizophrenia is a person's immunity to visual illusions.

Don't take your eyes off the picture while taking this test. If everything is in order with your psyche, you will notice an optical illusion.

Diagnostics and ITU

The process of diagnosis and ITU (medical and social examination) in schizophrenia can take quite a long time, since the manifestations of the disease are very diverse. Differential diagnosis makes it possible to exclude mental, somatic and neurological pathologies that have symptoms similar to schizophrenia. However, it is not always possible to make an accurate diagnosis immediately, even after differential diagnosis. How is the diagnostic process going? To begin with, the psychiatrist assesses the patient's condition during the conversation. It reveals productive and negative symptoms, as well as the degree of cognitive impairment. Often different tests are used. For example, one can reasonably accurately predict schizophrenia by eye movement.

A person with this pathology cannot smoothly follow a slowly moving object with his eyes. A specific eye movement in schizophrenics is also observed when looking at pictures freely. An experienced doctor is able to recognize signs of pathology in eye movement. It is also difficult for such people to keep their eyes still for a long time and fix their eyes on something. After the conversation, a series of examinations are carried out that allow you to assess the characteristics of the central nervous system, identify concomitant diseases, and endocrine disruptions. Studies such as EEG, MRI, TDS (special ultrasound scanning of cerebral vessels) allow for more accurate differential diagnosis, assessment of the severity of schizophrenia and the most effective selection of drugs. MRI in schizophrenia is one of the effective ways to solve the problem - how to recognize schizophrenia even before its obvious signs appear and the person's well-being worsens. It has been proven that changes in brain structures begin long before the onset of schizophrenia symptoms.

In the process of treatment, at each stage of remission, the patient's MSE is performed. If the exacerbation is of a protracted nature, the MSE can be carried out during the attack. At ITU, the duration and clinical form of schizophrenia, the dynamics and nature of negative disorders, the type and characteristics of mental disorders are assessed. Also in the process of ITU, it is important to assess how critical the patient is to his condition. At ITU, the stage of the disease, the nature of the leading syndrome and the quality of remissions are assessed. All this is necessary in order to determine the patient's disability group based on the results of the ITU. The first group of disability most often leads to a continuously ongoing malignant form of the disease, which develops early and causes a rapid increase in negative disorders.

The latent form of schizophrenia, the signs of which are usually mild, usually develops and proceeds slowly, which creates certain difficulties in diagnosing it. Classical science distinguishes a number of forms of schizophrenia, depending on the predominance of one or another psychopathological syndrome. So, classical psychiatry distinguishes the following forms of the disease:

  • simple;
  • catatonic;
  • hebephrenic;
  • paranoid;
  • circular.

These forms of the disease can also have different types of course, depending on the intensity of psychopathological changes.

Features of the use of the concept of "latent form of schizophrenia"

The term "latent form of schizophrenia" as such is not in the current international classification of diseases (ICD-10), that is, such a formulation of the diagnosis cannot be used by a medical specialist in diagnosing the disease. However, in different classifications, the term "latent form of schizophrenia" is mentioned, in addition, this disease has the following name options:

  • sluggish schizophrenia;
  • schizotypal disorder;
  • latent schizophrenia.

This state of affairs is due not so much to the difficulties of interpreting the concept as to the need for careful diagnosis and a small number of signs of the disease.

The latent form of schizophrenia is characterized by a very weak progression of the disease and slow pathological changes in the patient's personality. As for the signs of the disease, then, as noted earlier, this form of schizophrenia has a limited number of specific symptoms.

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Symptoms of a latent form of schizophrenia

This form of the disease is characterized by a minimal set of symptoms and their mild severity. So, the characteristic signs of the latent course of schizophrenia are as follows:

  • emotional disorders;
  • splitting of mental processes;
  • autism;
  • absence of productive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions).

Since the so-called latent forms of schizophrenia proceed slowly and develop gradually, this may be the beginning of a simple or paranoid form of the disease. Of course, only a psychotherapist should diagnose any mental disorder. Self-diagnosis in this case is unacceptable due to the weak intensity of symptoms.

The main features of these signs in the latent form of schizophrenia are their weak expression and blurring, which greatly complicates the diagnosis of the disease.

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Characteristics of symptoms

As mentioned above, emotional disorders are one of the main symptoms of the latent form of schizophrenia. These disorders are apathetic in nature and are characterized by a slow fading and fading of emotions. A person suffering from schizophrenia gradually becomes cold, aloof, callous, incapable of empathy. All his emotions and feelings lose their brightness and natural strength, become amorphous and monotonous. Sometimes there are paradoxical emotional reactions, which in the future increasingly begin to dominate the emotional spectrum of the patient. Such apathetic disorders are necessarily accompanied by a decrease in will, initiative, inactive indifference, lack of meaning in life and loss of life goals. However, at the same time, separate normal emotional manifestations remain, which, as a rule, arise about some minor life events.

In addition to emotional disorders, the next main symptom of the latent form of schizophrenia is splitting. This pathological symptom is characterized by the following manifestations. First of all, the patient has a lack of unity of mental processes, which leads to the loss of semantic connections of feelings, thoughts and actions. In the behavior and statements of the patient, this manifests itself as the coexistence of the paradoxical, the absurd with the real, vital. In addition, there is a loss of life goals by the patient and the predominance of paradoxical thoughts and ideas in the worldview. Thus, real life seems to be removed, and the main place in the mind of a person suffering from a latent form of schizophrenia is occupied by fantastic and absurd conclusions. Combinations of thoughts of completely opposite content are not uncommon. There are also phenomena such as:

  • inconsistency of emotional and facial reactions with statements;
  • influx of thoughts;
  • thought delays;
  • distortion of self-esteem;
  • speech fragmentation;
  • distortion of the meaning of words and concepts;
  • lack of arbitrariness of motor acts.

In addition to splitting, patients also experience manifestations of autism of varying degrees of intensity. As a rule, it is expressed in the absence of a desire for activity, for communication with others, for knowledge of the surrounding world. At the same time, the patient's position in life is limited only by his inner world, and contact with the doctor becomes formal, superficial. The severity of autism depends on the intensity of symptoms such as splitting and emotional disturbances.

In addition, it must be said that the characteristic features of the latent disease are the absence of productive symptoms and the weak severity of general symptoms.

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