Overview & Core Concept - Mind's Maze Intro
- Chronic, severe mental disorder affecting how a person thinks, feels, and behaves.
- Involves psychosis: loss of contact with reality.
- Key features: Distortions in thought, perception, emotions, behavior.
- Typical onset: Late adolescence / early adulthood (15-35 yrs).
⭐ Schizophrenia is a major psychotic disorder with a typical onset in late adolescence or early adulthood, significantly impacting social and occupational functioning.
Positive Symptoms - Reality's Remix
- Delusions: Fixed, false beliefs, resistant to evidence.
Type Key Feature Persecutory Belief of harm/plot Referential Cues directed at self Grandiose Inflated self-worth/power Control Thoughts/actions controlled Nihilistic Impending catastrophe - Hallucinations: Sensory perceptions without external stimuli.
Type Key Feature Auditory Voices (esp. 3rd person), sounds (common) Visual Seeing absent things Tactile Bodily sensations (formication) Olfactory Smelling absent odors
⭐ Auditory hallucinations, especially third-person voices commenting or discussing, are highly characteristic of schizophrenia.
- Disorganized Thinking (Speech):
- Derailment, tangentiality, incoherence (word salad), neologisms.
- Grossly Disorganized or Abnormal Motor Behavior:
- Unpredictable agitation, catatonic features (e.g., stupor, waxy flexibility).
Negative Symptoms - The Great Void
📌 The 5 A's of Negative Symptoms:
- Alogia: Poverty of speech (↓ speech output).
- Affective flattening: Blunted emotions, ↓ facial expression, poor eye contact.
- Avolition: ↓ goal-directed activity, apathy, poor hygiene.
- Anhedonia: ↓ ability to experience pleasure.
- Asociality: Social withdrawal, ↓ interest in relationships.

⭐ Negative symptoms like avolition and affective flattening are strong predictors of poor long-term outcome in schizophrenia.
These symptoms contribute significantly to functional impairment and are often more treatment-resistant than positive symptoms. They represent a loss or deficit of normal functions and are crucial for prognosis and daily functioning assessment. They are less responsive to typical antipsychotics compared to positive symptoms; atypical antipsychotics may have some efficacy. (79 words)
Cognitive & Other Features - Brain Fog & Blues
- Cognitive Deficits (Core "Brain Fog"):
- Often precede psychosis; persist throughout illness.
- Domains: Attention, working memory, executive functions (e.g., planning, problem-solving), verbal fluency, processing speed.
- Major determinant of functional outcome.
⭐ Cognitive impairment is a core feature of schizophrenia, often preceding psychosis onset and affecting multiple domains like attention, working memory, and executive functions.
- Mood & Other Symptoms ("Blues" & More):
- Depressive symptoms (common, incl. post-psychotic depression).
- Anxiety, agitation, irritability.
- ↑ Suicidality risk (significant concern).
- Impaired insight (anosognosia) is frequent.
- Associated Clinical Features:
- Substance use comorbidity (high rates).
- Neurological soft signs (NSS; e.g., motor coordination issues).
- Olfactory identification deficits.
- Water intoxication (polydipsia → hyponatremia risk).
Course & Diagnosis Essentials - Illness Timeline & Labels
- Illness Timeline:
- Key Diagnostic Durations (DSM-5):
- Schizophrenia: ≥ 1 month active symptoms; 6 months total disturbance.
- Schizophreniform Disorder: 1-6 months total.
- Brief Psychotic Disorder: < 1 month total.
⭐ For a DSM-5 diagnosis of schizophrenia, at least two characteristic symptoms must be present for a significant portion of time during a 1-month period (or less if successfully treated), with continuous signs of disturbance persisting for at least 6 months.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Schizophrenia involves positive (hallucinations, delusions), negative (avolition, alogia), and cognitive symptoms.
- Auditory hallucinations, especially third-person or running commentary, are classic.
- Delusions are fixed, false beliefs; persecutory and referential types are common.
- Negative symptoms like affective flattening and avolition cause major functional decline.
- DSM-5 mandates ≥6 months total duration, including ≥1 month of active-phase symptoms.
- Schneider's First Rank Symptoms (e.g., thought echo, passivity) are historically important.
- Marked social and occupational dysfunction is essential for diagnosis.
Unlock the full lesson and continue reading
Signup to continue reading this lesson and unlimited access questions, flashcards, AI notes, and more