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Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Schizophrenia Brain Ailment

Are You Afraid of Mental Illness Schizophrenia? Don’t be – It can be treated

Schizophrenia as a Brain disease leaves off strong effects on those who suffer from it. Usually, this brain ailment is evidenced by a drastic change in the behavior of the person suffering from the disease. The patient’s general behavior is characterized by chaos and irrational acts. The state of the brain for the person who is suffering from schizophrenia completely malfunctions; the feeling, thinking, understanding and sense of perception are distorted. Coherent thinking, appropriate expression of emotions and general interactions are carried out abnormally for the schizophrenia patient; every aspect of life for the schizophrenic patient is totally out of place.

Schizophrenia brain ailment is characterized with psychosis; this is the lost of touch with reality. The ability to differentiate between reality and imaginary things is completely distorted. Hallucination is also another characteristic of a schizophrenic patient accompanied by delusions. As the schizophrenic patient hallucinates; voices are being heard by the hallucinating schizophrenic patient; while in delusion, there is a feeling of looming hurt or harm.

What Are The Symptoms Of Schizophrenia?

Symptoms for schizophrenia brain ailment as with most brain diseases might include vibration, rigid muscle and slowness of movement. Hallucinations and delusions are also the features of this brain ailment.

Causes of Schizophrenia Brain Disease

Generally, most brain diseases are caused by a progressive distortion in the nervous system especially for the aging group. The good news is that advancement in technology has provided medications that bring relief to the symptoms of the ailment.

Prevention of Schizophrenia

A perception by researchers that little progress has been made in the understanding of aetiology of conditions of this type; has eroded their confidence in the primary prevention of schizophrenia. However, assessment of the effectiveness of some schizophrenia interventions can be done at birth. For example, folate supplements for the reduction of spinal tube closure defect, congenital rubella to be reduced by rubella vaccination. There are more to learn about prevention of schizophrenia

Treatment for Schizophrenia

Outcome for treatment of schizophrenia improved after the creation of antipsychotic. When medications are administered, there is possibility of patients getting relief from their symptoms and living independently. A study conducted recently proposed that from 15-20 years after being diagnosed with schizophrenia, an approximation of 38% of the patients have a moderately good outcome and they have good chances of functioning moderately well after treatment.

The possibility of a schizophrenic patient returning to an initial normal functioning level prior to developing the ailment is not high. But a good number of them are able to manage the symptoms very well; but this is after medication and therapy is administered. The percentage that might require a long term psychiatric hospitalization at the opposite extreme is only 12.

Individuals with schizophrenia have a good number of treatments available. For several years now, antipsychotic has been successfully used to reduce symptoms. For patients whose symptoms resisted the traditional neuroleptics, newer drugs called atypical antipsychotic are providing new hopes.

Also, patients suffering from schizophrenia can learn to manage their stress and also manage the symptoms through different types of counseling. It is also recommended that family members of a schizophrenic patient should be exposed to family therapy and counseling on how to live and manage their mentally ill member.

4 Responses to “Schizophrenia Brain Ailment”

Irish Says:

My mother had schizophrenia beginning in her mid 20′s until her death at 70. She was in and out of psychiatric hospitals, had extreme side effects from the drugs that “play with” until they find the right combination (which NONE produce a “cured” or even somewhat “normal” existence for her), and became a ward of her children – as there are very few avenues for assistance at the local, state, or federal government levels. ALSO, schizophrenia has been KNOWN to be inherent – there are genes detected to determine the percentage of possibilities of developing this disease. WORRY about schizophrenia – the lighthearted approach of the author’s title suggests that a simply pill and talk-session with a therapist will bring one back to a normal existence. I can tell from personal experience with my mother – a normal semblence of life is NOT, nor ever can be, provided to those that suffer this horrible disease. My mother lost her LIFE from this disease – over 40 years of fear, confusion, heightened emotions, paranoia, and nearly comatose states because of medicines given to her.

Gal50 Says:

My opinion is that people should be afraid of schizophrenia and various other related psychotic illnesses. With an incidence of 5%, it is likely that one person in an extended family will be stricken with a psychotic illness.

The picture presented in this article is logical, but psychotics are anything but logical. And therein lies the problem. The mean age for the first schizophrenic episode is a few years over the age of 18, which in the United States means that the schizophrenic, not his/her parents, determines his/her treatment. The problem is that schizophrenics are delusional and can’t make these kinds of decisions. Family members can hospitalize their ill family member for something like 48 hours, which is not enough time to treat schizophrenia. One feature of schizophrenia is paranoia, so there is very little chance that a schizophrenic is going to want to take a new pill or enter a strange hospital, even though doing so is in his/her best interest.

I had a friend who has paranoid delusions and refused treatment. His paranoia convinced him that patients were the medical establishment’s guinea pigs. So, one day when he was convinced that the FBI was going to kill him, he boarded a plane to fast foot it out of the country. He left behind a disabled wife who can not support herself, his thriving profession practice, his home and his friends. Instead of responding in a healthy manner to his psychosis, he traveled a route that was extremely destructive.

Tech Says:

Yeah, I was diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with a lot of depression after working 22 years as a senior technician for several large corporations when they decided to get rid of me without paying even severence and I saw them fleecing the taxpayers hundreds of millions. I didn’t say anything but the company was being investigated by Congress, Justice and the state. What do you do when you find out the corporation you are working for is tied to a lot of nasty stuff like the entire pharmaceutical industry which profits when they say your crazy? 90% bunk. Sure people get depressed, life is crazy with a few gangster bankers and criminals running the show. 911, Patriot Act, NSA spying, Homeland Security, yeah it gets worse just wait. Over 10% of this country is anti-depressants now-over 30 million! Drug dealers, they have a pill for everything now and make a fortune with kickbacks to the “doctors”.
Oh, it was the last company worked for NCS Pearson which became that as Pearson Plc. paid 2.6 billion to buy NCS shortly before 911. Akin&Gump is the law and lobbying firm the big boys use(the one in the movie Syriana)and they “did” No Child Left Behind”, TSA-1st contract which they overbilled from 103 million to 742 million! Pearson Plc is a huge conglomerate operating in 64 countries and they just shut down divisions, get rid of people, pay off Congressmen etc. Justice took years to get a lousy 5.6 million back and Congress gets shut down-National Security. Baloney. Tip of the iceburg and don’t let then get you “labeled”. You’re going to love the New World Order. Off to Walmart to check out the latest Communist? Chinese made goodies! See, I’m “crazy”. Back to Hollywood Insider! What’s the latest on Britney’s boobs? America, you’re in for a world of pain.

Thia Says:

First, a bit about me, if I may take such a privilege. I am a 32, married mother of two. I started having suicidal idealisation at the age of eight or so, was first hospitalized at 13, and first attempted suicide at 15. By now, I have attempted suicide so many times I’ve lost count, and been on so many medications I’ve lost track. But now, diagnoised with schizo-affective disorder, I have a very good psychiatrist who has me on a good regimen of medications, and a wonderful support system of friends and family.

A bit, now, of what I’ve learned in my dealings with other patients, caregivers, and studying the condition. First of all, schizophrenia is a very serious condition, more serious than the light this article shines on it details. There are numerous problems with treating it. (1) The Public: Everyone is terrified of schizophrenics, it seems. We are all monsters, guised in the cloak of normality one minute, ready to eat brains the next, or so all believe. We should all be locked away forever, force fed whatever medication first pops into the head of the first doctor assigned to us, nevermind the side effects. Why would anyone want to wear the star of schizophrenia on the shoulder, faced with that treatment? Without first admitting there’s a problem, there’s no way to receive treatment. (2) The hospitals: Let’s assume the schizophrenic is on government insurance, or has none. Most of the hospitals have a very short maximum stay nowadays- the longest I’ve been in in years is five days, I think, and talking with other patients it seems about the same for them. That is really not enough time to get stabilized on a good medication, or form a good working relationship with a doctor. (3) The medications: Most of the medications have side effects ranging from difficult to deal with to horrific. Common “mild” side effects are twitching, drooling, falling unconscious, etc. on a constant basis. “Severe”… Well, for me there was one that caused a grand mal seizure, one that killed off all my white blood cells (they came back over a period of a month in isolation, thank goodness), and TWO that caused full body muscle spasms that sent me to the ER once someone came around, since I couldn’t walk, talk, or pick up the phone to call 911. It’s no wonder why some get frustrated and give up on taking their medications. Then there’s those that don’t mean to really stop their meds, but they skip a dose or two, feel fine since it’s still in their system, and think “Great, I’m cured, I don’t need it anymore!” Later, however it hits hard when the medication leaves their system: a psychotic break is not uncommon here (I’ve fallen into this trap a few times). (4) Lack of Support: Many people with mental illnessness don’t have a good support system of friends and family, and that alone- someone to look at their pill bottles and notice they ran out days ago, someone they can call in they middle of the night, a role model, or sometimes just someone to give them a smile on a rought day- can make all the difference.

Lastly, do you drive or play the lotto, by chance? You are more likely to be killed by a drunk driver or to win the lottery than to be attacked by a schizophrenic.

Now then, a few responses. Irish, you say it’s Inherent, that certain genes can say what percetege chance there will be to develop the disease. This is both thrilling and terrifing: Thrilling, because forewarning should be forearmed; terrifing, because we have all heard horror stories of genecide. I say, if you fear schizophrenia, or any other mental illness, in another, watch the subject for signs of depression or dellusion (typically paranoia), and try to keep good communication between you and them (or get someone else to, if they trust them better) about their emotions, and be honest with them about the risk of such diseases. My family and I have talked to my eldest son about my illness- the fact that he is three years older than I was when I started wanting to die and has no such problems himself elates me.

Gal50, the average age for become schizophrenic is 18 for men, but 25 for women. I’m sorry about your friend.

Thankyou for allowing me to speak.

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