Schizophrenia |
DescriptionAn in-depth report on the causes, diagnosis, and treatment of schizophrenia |
SymptomsResearch indicates that symptoms in childhood strongly predict disease in adulthood. In one long-term study, over 40% of schizophrenics who developed the disease in young adulthood had reported psychotic symptoms at age 11. For children with a family history of schizophrenia, the following inherited traits may be warning signs:
Some experts suggest that screening young high-risk individuals using brain imaging techniques possibly followed by treatment may help prevent nerve damage and improve the outcome for this difficult disease. Most often, early warning signs go unnoticed and schizophrenia usually becomes evident for the first time in late adolescence or early adulthood. Schizophrenia that starts in childhood or adolescence tends to be severe. It should be strongly noted that the traits discussed above, even combinations of them, can be present without schizophrenia. Symptoms of Progression to Full-Blown SchizophreniaThe course of the disease varies from one patient to the next. Symptoms of psychosis can become evident either gradually or suddenly.
Typically, patients develop considerable cognitive dysfunction (disordered thinking) within the first four or five years of the onset of psychotic symptoms. There is some evidence that the physical disease process in schizophrenia is progressive, as with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. However, schizophrenia does not progress in the same way as those two diseases. In one study, men with schizophrenia showed an annual decline of 3% in areas in the front of the brain compared to slightly less than 1% in men without schizophrenia. Unlike Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, however, eventually cognitive function usually stabilizes. Psychosis, disorganized thought, and negative symptoms often improve over time, although, even in such cases, deficits in verbal memory usually persist. (Thought disorder often improves in concert with improvements in negative symptoms.) |
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