Saturday, January 2, 2010

What Is Schizophrenia More Condition_symptoms What Other Types Of Schizophrenia Are More Common?

What other types of schizophrenia are more common? - what is schizophrenia more condition_symptoms

I read that the species is not paranoid traits are widespread and misleading? Can you describe is a less severe form of schizophrenia, how? And when is the typical appearance and causal factors?

3 comments:

  1. Paranoid schizophrenia is the most common form of organized catatonic and bad. A person with paranoid schizophrenia, delusions and hallucinations (positive symptoms). A person with a severe catatonic motor skills such as gestures or unusual use of body language. Patients who develop problems of disorganized thinking, and are poorly organized in general and not the goal.

    The slightest criticism is undifferentiated. This is where the patient shows symptoms of schizophrenia, but that not having any of the other categories.

    A person may also be affected by secondary symptoms such as depression, as a result of the treatment of the disease.

    Men often notice symptoms in late adolescence or twenty years. Women are affected more often in the late twenties and thirties.

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  2. Historically, schizophrenia in the West are divided into simple, catatonic, hebephrenic and paranoid. The DSM now contains five sub-classifications of schizophrenia, ICD-10 identified 7:

    (295.2/F20.2), catatonic (large psychomotor disturbances on the hand. Symptoms can include) catatonic stupor and flexibility of the wax.
    (295.1/F20.1), disorganized type (where thought disorder and flat affect are present together),
    (295.3/F20.0) paranoid (where delusions and hallucinations are present but thought disorder, disorganized behavior, and affective flattening) are missing,
    (295.6/F20.5) residual (where positive symptoms are only present) in a low intensity and
    (295.9/F20.3) undifferentiated type (psychotic symptoms are present, but the criteria for paranoid, disorganized or catatonic not met).
    Note: The brackets indicate the codes of DSM and ICD-10 diagnostic manual, respectively. Some older classifications are still with the "disorganized schizophrenia" instead of "disorganized schizophrenia.

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  3. Historically, schizophrenia in the West are divided into simple, catatonic, hebephrenic and paranoid. The DSM now contains five sub-classifications of schizophrenia, ICD-10 identified 7:

    (295.2/F20.2), catatonic (large psychomotor disturbances on the hand. Symptoms can include) catatonic stupor and flexibility of the wax.
    (295.1/F20.1), disorganized type (where thought disorder and flat affect are present together),
    (295.3/F20.0) paranoid (where delusions and hallucinations are present but thought disorder, disorganized behavior, and affective flattening) are missing,
    (295.6/F20.5) residual (where positive symptoms are only present) in a low intensity and
    (295.9/F20.3) undifferentiated type (psychotic symptoms are present, but the criteria for paranoid, disorganized or catatonic not met).
    Note: The brackets indicate the codes of DSM and ICD-10 diagnostic manual, respectively. Some older classifications are still with the "disorganized schizophrenia" instead of "disorganized schizophrenia.

    ReplyDelete