What is schizophrenia? – Anees Bahji

Schizophrenia was first identified
more than a century ago, but we still don’t know its exact causes. It remains one of the most misunderstood
and stigmatized illnesses today. So, let’s walk through what we do know—
from symptoms to causes and treatments. Schizophrenia is considered a syndrome, which means it may encompass
a number of related disorders that have similar symptoms
but varying causes. Every person with schizophrenia
has slightly different symptoms, and the first signs can be easy to miss—
subtle personality changes, irritability, or a gradual encroachment
of unusual thoughts. Patients are usually diagnosed
after the onset of psychosis, which typically occurs in the late teens
or early twenties for men and the late twenties
or early thirties for women. A first psychotic episode can feature
delusions, hallucinations, and disordered speech and behavior. These are called positive symptoms, meaning they occur
in people with schizophrenia but not in the general population. It’s a common misperception
that people with schizophrenia have multiple personalities, but these symptoms indicate a disruption
of thought processes, rather than the manifestation
of another personality. Schizophrenia also has negative symptoms, these are qualities that are reduced
in people with schizophrenia, such as motivation,
expression of emotion, or speech. There are cognitive symptoms as well,
like difficulty concentrating, remembering information,
and making decisions. So what causes the onset of psychosis? There likely isn’t one single cause,
but a combination of genetic and environmental
risk factors that contribute. Schizophrenia has some of the strongest
genetic links of any psychiatric illness. Though about 1% of people
have schizophrenia, children or siblings of people
with schizophrenia are ten times likelier to develop the disease, and an identical twin
of someone with schizophrenia has a 40% chance of being affected. Often, immediate relatives
of people with schizophrenia exhibit milder versions of traits
associated with the disorder— but not to an extent
that requires treatment. Multiple genes almost certainly
play a role, but we don’t know how many, or which ones. Environmental factors like exposure
to certain viruses in early infancy might increase the chance
that someone will develop schizophrenia, and use of some drugs,
including marijuana, may trigger the onset of psychosis in highly susceptible individuals. These factors don’t affect
everyone the same way. For those with very low genetic risk, no amount of exposure
to environmental risk factors will lead them to develop schizophrenia; for those with very high risk, moderate
additional risk might tip the balance. The antipsychotic drugs used to treat
schizophrenia have helped researchers work backwards to trace signatures
of the disorder in the brain. Traditional antipsychotics
block dopamine receptors. They can be very effective
in reducing positive symptoms, which are linked to an excess of dopamine
in particular brain pathways. But the same drugs
can make negative symptoms worse, and we’ve found that negative symptoms
of schizophrenia may be tied to too little dopamine
in other brain areas. Some people with schizophrenia
show a loss of neural tissue, and it’s unclear whether this atrophy
is a result of the disease itself or drug-induced suppression of signaling. Fortunately, newer generations
of antipsychotics aim to address some of these issues by targeting
multiple neurotransmitters, like serotonin in addition to dopamine. It’s clear that no one transmitter system
is responsible for all symptoms, and because these drugs affect signaling
throughout the brain and body, they can have other
side effects like weight gain. In spite of these complications,
antipsychotics can be very effective, especially when combined
with other interventions like cognitive-behavioral therapy. Electroconvulsive therapy, though
it provides relatively short-lived relief, is also re-emerging
as an effective treatment, especially when other options
have failed. Early intervention
is also extremely important. After months or years
of untreated psychosis, certain psychoses can become embedded
in someone’s personality. And yet, the dehumanizing stigma
attached to this diagnosis can prevent people from seeking help. People with schizophrenia
are often perceived as dangerous, but are actually much more likely
to be the victims of violence than the perpetrators. And proper treatment may help reduce
the likelihood of violence associated with schizophrenia. That’s why education— for patients,
their families, and their communities— helps erode the stigma
and improves access to treatment.

Discover what we know— and don’t know— about the symptoms, causes, and treatments of schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia was first identified more than a century ago, but we still don’t know its exact causes. It remains one of the most misunderstood and stigmatized illnesses today. So what do we actually know about its symptoms, causes, and treatments? Anees Bahji investigates.

Lesson by Anees Bahji, directed by Artrake Studio.

Animator’s website: https://www.artrake.com/
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42 Comments

  1. I'm a 20 year old girl feeling lost of interest in activities, not expressing emotions also feeling sad like at 2 pm I want to cry the previous night. Also need a best buddy who understands me . What should I do?

  2. Imagine a unicorn. Imagine it as vividly and realistically as possible. More realistically! More vividly! More detail! More reality! Imagine every hair on its body. Imagine every organ and cell. Imagine every molecule with perfect precision. Imagine it so deeply that an actual living unicorn appears before you. THAT is how God creates all physical objects. Look around your room. That’s what everything is. You just take it completely for granted because you are so unconscious. I am making an empirical claim that if you sit there long enough imagining that unicorn, it will materialize in front of you. But you are too weak-minded to do it. And if you ever succeed at it, you will think you’ve gone insane and run to the doctor for crazy pills, and he will give them to you, along with a diagnosis of mental illness to put you at ease.

  3. Took me 60 mins to got to walk-in clinic 5 to seven Stops along the way, gasping .2 and a half hours to get dressed so I don't have SchizophreniA Tourette Or PTSD
    OCPD is what my symptoms say Skitzophrenia just Is Entertainment Untapped Knowledge Awareness

  4. One of my dad's brothers developed it after he got shot…he was in college, had a breakdown and was never the same afterwards. I read it has something to do with weed making it worse as well?

  5. It's the medication that the pharmaceutical industry gives them to open the portals spiritually in their brain and demons come in and take them over

  6. For many people diagnosed with schizophrenia (or other psychotic spectrum conditions), the core experience isn’t just “random chemical imbalance” like the oversimplified narrative says. Instead, it can be:
    • Extreme sensitivity to emotions, environments, and social undercurrents, the kind that picks up on subtleties others miss.
    • Chronic invalidation, growing up in systems or families where their perceptions are dismissed or pathologised, rather than nurtured.
    • Overwhelm from trauma or chaos, especially when highly sensitive, because the nervous system is already tuned to maximum.
    • A society that has no safe place for those who think, feel, and perceive at unusual depths.

    In that environment, a sensitive person’s extraordinary perception can tip into extreme stress responses, dissociation, paranoia, hearing meaning in patterns others can’t see, not because they’re “broken” but because they’ve been overloaded without proper grounding or understanding.

    Historically, some cultures would have recognised such people as shamans, seers, or spiritual intermediaries, and protected them. Modern systems often do the opposite.

  7. Intentional malicious medical malpractice of imposing torture inducing antipsychotics on a Complex PTSD suffering ADD ADHD Combined Type Type 2 patient who had been earning C's in calculus in college and even driving there and now can no longer do calculus nor drive after an intentional malicious medical malpractice diagnosis and forced medication against my bodily health in a state with the constitutional right to refuse medication, where the medication they forced on me made me suffer abnormal thoughts on a level unestablished prior to the change induced by the initial imposition of the medicine that does the exact opposite of what ADHD medicine does in a C-PTSD suffering individual. My psychiatrist died and I think they not only know they are missing my records at the heart of the misdiagnosis but when my C-PTSD started my psychiatrist died and they know the records are missing because they murdered him and they are trying to sabotage me.

  8. あなたは、統合失調症、パニック障害、PTSD、双極性障害を患っているという事でいいかな?こんなに沢山抱えて……どれだけ大変だったか……
    ほんとうによくここまで頑張ったね

  9. そして、今も頑張っているんだよね、あなたは 
    一つ何か抱えると増えたりしがちだよね?私だけ?
    私も、鬱になった後に摂食障害になったの クラシックバレエをずっとやっていて、太ったら駄目だったから、食べる事に罪悪感を持っていたの

  10. そして、今も頑張っているんだよね、あなたは 
    一つ何か抱えると増えたりしがちだよね?私だけ?
    私も、鬱になった後に摂食障害になったの クラシックバレエをずっとやっていて、太ったら駄目だったから、食べる事に罪悪感を持っていたの

  11. 臨床的うつ病と双極性障害の両方ってことはないのかなと勝手に思って双極性障害の方を書いたけど、勘違いしていたらごめんね

  12. 3:46 it's drug enduced lot of the information about what drugs do don't come out to the public sertain things that have been told was found out and a lot of times it's being blamed not on the drugs but on a decease😅

  13. A question to the sick ones: How do you distinguish between spiritual realm and psychotic experience? I once felt in 2020 as if I had no pulse from heart. Like nothing, like my heartbeat disappeared… I had my pulse measured and felt like my heartbeat disappeared. I felt like a dead man. It was before COVID.

  14. They may be more likely to fall victim to crime, but at the same time they are much more likely than a normal person to commit crime. Thought that was a pretty important detail you let out.

  15. I always assumed that Schizophrenia gives people a lot of intelligence and creativity, but in exchange of such gift, they cannot filter out such vivid imagination from real world stimulus. Like, too much imagination takes over, and it is so realistic that anyone would say it is real.

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