Catastrophic schizophrenia explained

In psychiatry, catastrophic schizophrenia or schizocaria is an obsolete[1] term for a rare[2] [3] and acute form of schizophrenia leading directly to a severe and unremitting chronic psychosis[4] (the long term occurrence of psychosis) and deterioration of the personality. Catastrophic schizophrenia was thought to be the most severe subtype of schizophrenia, as it had "an acute onset and rapid decline into a chronic state without remission".[5] Catastrophic schizophrenia was also referred to as schizocaria, which was defined by Gerhard Mauz as a psychosis that caused the absolute destruction of the core of one's being.[6] The term "catastrophic schizophrenia" has fallen out of use due to a number of reasons, including advances in psychiatric treatment, which led to a significant decline in patients that fit the diagnosis as their symptoms did not reach the severity of catastrophic schizophrenia, along with modern refinement of the definition and subtypes of schizophrenia. This term has not been included in any version of the DSM. In modern terms, catastrophic schizophrenia would likely be defined as 'acute-onset chronic schizophrenia with poor prognosis'.

History

Schizophrenia evolved from Kraepelin's dementia praecox, which was first defined in 1893. Using dementia praecox as a base, Eugen Bleuler defined and differentiated subtypes of schizophrenia at the turn of the century. He stated that catastrophic schizophrenia was characterized by an acute onset of a severe psychosis, followed with little improvement by a severe chronic psychosis lasting until death.[7]

Young adults (aged 16–25) were at the highest risk of developing catastrophic schizophrenia. It was almost entirely exclusive to upper class and intellectuals.[6] Other risk factors included difficulty adapting to change, individualism, and introversion.[6]

E.B. Strauss stated that schizophrenia could come about in two ways: either catastrophically or through a series of 'attacks'.[6] Strauss used catastrophic to refer to schizophrenia that ran a rapidly progressing and continuous course.[6] According to Strauss, catastrophic schizophrenia took a similar course to catatonic schizophrenia and hebephrenia, with all three ending in the total collapse into psychosis within two to four years.[6]

Decline

Eugen Bleuler found that catastrophic schizophrenia affected 10-15% of people with schizophrenia.[8] However, over time, the number of patients that fit this diagnosis declined significantly. The outcome of a study by Luc Ciompi and Christian Müller in 1976 has shown that only 6 percent of patients with schizophrenia were judged to have catastrophic schizophrenia.[4] [9] [10]

In longitudinal studies begun in the 1930s and ending in the 1980s, Manfred Bleuler (Eugen's son) found the incidences of catastrophic schizophrenia had declined significantly since his father's study.[11] Manfred Bleuler posited that improved hospitals, nursing care, and rehabilitation efforts led to this decline. The decline of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), chlorpromazine, and insulin shock therapy, used extensively in the 1940s and 1950s, could have also played a role in eliminating catastrophic schizophrenia. The term was not included in the DSM-I and is now no longer used, due to changes in how the sub-types of schizophrenia are defined.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Corsini, Raymond J.. Dictionary of Psychology. 2002. Psychology Press. 978-1583913284. 864.
  2. Robert Jean Campbell, Campbell's Psychiatric Dictionary, 2009, page 872
  3. The long-term course of schizophrenic psychoses: The combined results of two research studies. Bleuler, M. . Huber, G. . Gross, Gisela . Schüttler, R. . Der Nervenarzt. 47. 8. August 1976. 477–481 .
  4. Richard P. Bentall, Reconstructing schizophrenia, 1992, page 62
  5. Book: Alan S. Bellack. Schizophrenia: treatment, management, and rehabilitation . Pearson Allyn & Bacon . Boston . 1984 . 978-0-15-869400-9 .
  6. Strauss. E.B.. Some Principles Underlying Prognosis in Schizophrenia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. July 1931. 24. 9. 1217–1222. 2183090. 19988249. 10.1177/003591573102400941.
  7. Irving B. Weiner, Donald K. Freedheim, George Stricker & Thomas A. Widiger, Handbook of Psychology: Clinical psychology, 2003, page 74
  8. McGlashan. Thomas H.. Jan Olav Johannessen. Early Detection and Intervention with Schizophrenia: Rationale. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 1996. 22. 2. 201–222. 8782282. 10.1093/schbul/22.2.201. free.
  9. George Stein, Greg Wilkinson, Seminars in General Adult Psychiatry, 2007, Page 301
  10. Luc Ciompi, Christian Müller: Lebensweg und Alter der Schizophrenen. Eine katamnestische Langzeitstudie bis ins Senium (Life and age of schizophrenics. A longitudinal study catamnestic down to senility). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, NY (USA), 1976
  11. Web site: Introduction to Manfred Bleuler's "The Offspring of Schizophrenics". 1974. 10.1093/schbul/1.8.91. Rosenthal. D.. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 8. 91–92. 4619495.