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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

188798

Schizophrenia

a complex mental illness

María Graciela López Ordieres

pp. 417-426

Abstract

Schizophrenia is a complex mental illness that affects 1% of the world population without differences of gender, race, or social status that requires effective antipsychotic treatments producing minimal adverse effects. Schizophrenia is thought as a disconnection disorder of functional brain networks that produces three essential types of clinical manifestations: psychotic symptoms, negative symptoms, and cognitive impairment. The former include loss of contact with reality, including delusions and hallucinations. Negative symptoms are states of deficit in which the basic behavior is diminished or absent. Cognitive impairment includes disturbance in attention, concentration, learning and memory, and operational functions. Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental disorder which is the result of multiple factor interactions such as viral illnesses during pregnancy, environmental agents, immunological dysfunction, or obstetric complications. Like other major psychiatric disorders, schizophrenia is also associated with abnormalities in multiple epigenetic mechanisms, resulting in altered gene expression during development and adulthood.Several lines of evidence have studied anatomical and functional modifications and altered neurotransmission systems involved in the schizophrenia. This knowledge has been used to achieve better understanding of the disease and the possibility of developing new drugs; many of them have recently been approved for the routine clinical use.

Publication details

Published in:

Mesones Arroyo Humberto Luis (2019) Psychiatry and neuroscience update: from translational research to a humanistic approach - volume iii. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 417-426

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-95360-1_33

Full citation:

López Ordieres María Graciela (2019) „Schizophrenia: a complex mental illness“, In: H. Mesones arroyo (ed.), Psychiatry and neuroscience update, Dordrecht, Springer, 417–426.