●Schizophrenia 110 ●Behavioural emergencies 114
CHAPTER 19
SCHIZOPHRENIA AND
BEHAVIOURAL EMERGENCIES
SCHIZOPHRENIA
INTRODUCTION
Schizophrenia is a devastating disease that affects approxi-
mately 1% of the population. The onset is often in adolescence
or young adulthood and the disease is usually characterized by
recurrent acute episodes which may develop into chronic dis-
ease. The introduction of antipsychotic drugs such as chlorpro-
mazinerevolutionized the treatment of schizophrenia so that
the majority of patients, once the acute symptoms are relieved,
can now be cared for in the community. Previously, they would
commonly be sentenced to a lifetime in institutional care.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The aetiology of schizophrenia, for which there is a genetic pre-
disposition, is unknown, although several precipitating factors
are recognized (Figure 19.1). Neurodevelopmental delay has
been implicated and it has been postulated that the disease is
triggered by some life experience in individuals predisposed by
an abnormal (biochemical/anatomical) mesolimbic system.
There is heterogeneity in clinical features, course of disease
and response to therapy. The concept of an underlying
neurochemical disorder is advanced by the dopamine theory
of schizophrenia, summarized in Box 19.1. The majority of
antipsychotics block dopamine receptors in the forebrain.
5-Hydroxytryptamine is also implicated, as indicated in Box
19.2. Glutamine hypoactivity, GABA hypoactivity and α-adren-
ergic hyperactivity are also potential neurochemical targets.
About 30% of patients with schizophrenia respond inad-
equately to conventional dopamine D 2 receptor antagonists. A
high proportion of such refractory patients respond to clozap-
ine, an ‘atypical’ antipsychotic drug which binds only tran-
siently to D 2 receptors, but acts on other receptors, especially
muscarinic, 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors (5HT 2 ) and D 1 ,
and displays an especially high affinity for D 4 receptors. The
D 4 receptor is localized to cortical regions and may be over-
expressed in schizophrenia. Regional dopamine differences
may be involved, such as low mesocortical activity with high
mesolimbic activity. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) stud-
ies indicate enlargement of ventricles and loss of brain tissue,
whilst functional MRI and positron emission tomography
(PET) suggest hyperactivity in some cerebral areas, consistent
with loss of inhibitory neurone function.
012345
Odds Ratio
Winter
Urban
Place/time of birth
Infection
Prenatal
Obstetric
Influenza
Respiratory
Rubella
Poliovirus
CNS
Famine
Bereavement
Flood
Unwantedness
Maternal depression
Rhesus Incompatibility
Hypoxia
CNS damage
Low birth weight
Pre-eclampsia
Family history
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Figure 19.1:Predispositions to
schizophrenia. Redrawn with permission
from Sullivan PF. The genetics of
schizophrenia.PLoS Medicine2005; 2 : e212.