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Schizophrenia is a chronic, severe mental condition that affects how people think, act, express emotions, perceive reality, and interact with others. Though schizophrenia is not as frequent as other major mental illnesses, it is the most persistent and debilitating.
People with schizophrenia frequently struggle to function properly in society, at work, at school, and in relationships. They may appear to be fearful and withdrawn, and they may appear to have lost touch with reality. This chronic disease cannot be cured, but it can be managed with correct treatment.
Schizophrenia, contrary to popular opinion, is not a split or multiple personality disorder. Schizophrenia is characterized by psychosis, a type of mental illness in which a person is unable to distinguish between what is real and what is imagined. People suffering from psychotic disorders can lose contact with reality at times. The world may appear to be a tangle of perplexing thoughts, images, and noises. Their behavior may be unusual, even alarming. A psychotic episode is a sudden change in personality and behavior that occurs when people with it lose touch with reality.
The severity of schizophrenia varies from individual to person. Some people experience only one psychotic episode throughout their lives, while others have multiple episodes over the course of their lives but have quite regular lives in between. Others may experience increased difficulty functioning over time, with little improvement between full-fledged psychotic episodes. Symptoms of schizophrenia appear to worsen and mend in cycles known as relapses and remissions.
WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?
Early symptoms
- A shift in grades
- Withdrawal from social activities
- Having difficulty concentrating
- Flares of temper
- Sleeping problems
Positive signs
- Delusions: These are incorrect, muddled, and sometimes odd ideas that aren’t grounded in reality and that the person refuses to abandon, even when confronted with evidence to the contrary. A person suffering from delusions, for example, may feel that others can hear their thoughts, that they are God or the devil, or that others are putting thoughts into their heads or scheming against them.
- Hallucinations: These involve fictitious experiences. The most prevalent delusion in patients with schizophrenia is hearing voices. The voices may make observations about the person’s behavior, insult them, or issue directives. Less common varieties include seeing objects that aren’t there, tasting weird aromas, experiencing a peculiar taste in your tongue, and feeling sensations on your skin despite nothing touching your body.
- Catatonia: In this state, the person may stop speaking and remain in a single position for an extended period of time.
Disorganized Symptoms
- Talking in illogical sentences or utilizing meaningless words, making it difficult for the person to communicate or maintain a conversation
- Rapidly shifting from one thought to the next with no visible or logical link between them
- Slowly moving
- Inability to make judgments
- Excessive but meaningless writing
- Forgetting or misplacing items
- Pacing or walking in circles are examples of repetitive movements or gestures.
- Having difficulty making sense of ordinary sights, sounds, and emotions
Cognitive symptoms
- disordered thinking or speech, such as when a person abruptly switches topics while speaking or employs made-up words or phrases
- forgetfulness
- a lack of organization in one’s thinking, such as difficulty focusing or paying attention
- inadequate “executive functioning,” or the ability to grasp information and use it to make decisions
- issues in learning and applying information
- Schizophrenia symptoms can vary in degree and type, and can be exacerbated if a person is under stress, using substances, or not taking their prescription meds correctly.
WHAT ARE THE CAUSES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?
WHAT ARE THE RISK FACTORS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?
- Toxins, a virus, or starvation before or during birth or infancy
- using mind-altering substances
- being in a high-stress situation
- experimenting with mind-altering substances throughout adolescent or early adulthood
HOW IS SCHIZOPHRENIA DIAGNOSED?
- Delusions
- Hallucinations
- Speech that is disorganized
- Behavior that is disorganized or catatonic
- Negative signs and symptoms
- At least one of the symptoms must be
- Delusions
- Hallucinations
- Speech that is disorganized
WHAT ARE THE TREATMENTS FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA?
Medications
Vocational rehabilitation
Psychosocial intervention
Family assistance and education
HOW CAN SCHIZOPHRENIA BE PREVENTED?
- discover more about your condition
- understand the risks
- adhere to your doctor’s treatment plan