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Schizoaffective Disorder
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Schizoaffective Disorder
Difficulty In Distinguishing Illnesses
People with:
- affective disorders usually appear normal between episodes of
illness and do not become more seriously disabled with time.
-
schizophrenia rarely seem normal, and their condition tends to
deteriorate, at least in the early years of the illness.
This distinction is not always as obvious as the description suggests.
Emotion and behavior are more fluid and less easy to classify than physical
symptoms. Seriously depressed and manic people often have
hallucinations and
delusions. Mania can be impossible to distinguish from an acute
schizophrenic reaction, and psychotic or delusional depression is important
enough to rate its own classification by some psychiatrists. Mood changes
occur both as symptoms of schizophrenia and as reactions to its devastating
effects; for example,
depression after a schizophrenic episode
(post-psychotic depression) is common and often severe, and it is during
this time that a person suffering from schizophrenia is most likely to
commit suicide.
Schizophrenic apathy and an incapacity for pleasure can also be mistaken
for depression. Often a diagnosis has to be changed from one kind of major
mental disorder to the other. In a recent study of more than 936 people with
a severe psychiatric disorder who were hospitalized at least four times in a
seven-year period, investigators found that about 25% of those originally
given other diagnoses (including bipolar disorder) and 33% of those
originally given other diagnoses (including bipolar disorder) had a final
diagnosis of schizophrenia.
Signs That May Help Define Schizoaffective as the Diagnosis
- The illness usually begins in early adulthood.
- It is more common in
women. A person has difficulty in following a moving object with their eyes.
- A person’s rapid eye movement (dreaming) begins unusually early in the
night.
However, the research is inadequate and the results have been
confused by varying definitions.
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