Psychotic Arousal and the Psychopathology of Acute Schizophrenia: An Exploratory Study of the Experiential Emotional State in Acute Psychosis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Emotions and Schizophrenia
1.1.1. Negative Symptoms
1.1.2. Emotions and the Emergence of Schizophrenia
The Pre-Delusional Emotional State
The Emotional State of Acute Schizophrenia: Clinical Observations
1.1.3. Toward an Emotional Continuum in the Emergence of Psychosis
1.1.4. Neurobiological Data on Emotions in Florid Psychosis
1.2. Psychotic Arousal as a Psychopathological Concept
1.3. The Study
Aims of the Study
- Psychotic arousal is a psychopathological construct distinct from other psychopathological phenomena and eligible for investigation;
- Abnormal experiential feelings are an integral part of this entity and are present during an acute schizophrenia episode;
- Psychotic arousal is amenable to antipsychotic treatment during the first period of treatment.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Scale
2.1.1. Development of the Scale
2.1.2. Description of the Scale
- “Primary experiential feelings” (non-exhaustive list of abnormal experiential feelings relative to instinctual conception of the self, others, or world images) (45 items);
- “Secondary/Ancillary feelings” (feelings associated with cognitive and operational shortfalls accompanying the emergence of the disorder) (10 items);
- “General anxiety feelings” and vague affective reactions relative to erroneous beliefs or perceptual disturbances and other consequences of the disorder (9 items).
2.1.3. Administration of the Scale
- 0
- Doubtful or absent;
- 1
- Rare: 1–2 times (on different days) within the previous 10 days;
- 2
- Moderate: 3–4 times (on different days) within the previous 10 days;
- 3
- Moderately Severe: almost daily, very few days free of symptoms (1–3 days) within the previous 10 days;
- 4
- Severe: daily (Some days only 1 or 2 instances albeit every day);
- 5
- Very Severe: daily (very frequently—multiple times within the same day, every day).
2.2. The Pilot Study
2.2.1. Sample of Patients
2.2.2. Scales
- The Psychotic Arousal Scale (PAS) (initial form) (64 items);
- The Brown Assessment of Beliefs Scale (BABS): a semi-structured, rater-administered scale that assesses insight/delusionality in a variety of disorders [96];
- Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A): a clinician-rated scale developed to measure the severity of anxiety symptoms in both clinical and research settings [97];
- (a)
- A primary analysis on the internal reliability of the scale.
- (b)
- An initial exploration on the relationships with global psychopathological measures, anxiety/depression measures and with the Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale. The latter scale was chosen as a discriminant index for anxiety and uneasiness due to antipsychotic treatment.
- (c)
- Since our hypothesis was that psychotic arousal characterizes prominently the acute phase of psychosis and is subject to the action of psychopharmacological agents during the first period of therapy, we also tested sensitivity to change on a sample of crisis intervention patients. Taking into consideration the overall mean time of the intervention in the unit published elsewhere [88,106], we tested patients on PAS at three consecutive periods (T1: at entrance, T2: 15–20 days later, and T3: at discharge).
2.2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Feels that the world around him/her is unwelcoming, dangerous and/or threatening (Primary)
- Feels that other people are not the ones that they are supposed to be (as if they impersonate somebody else) (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels anxiety and fear of being threatened, intensified in places where there are other people (Primary)
- Feels that unknown people on the street or television or dispersed talks refer to him/her (Primary)
- Feels fear or insecurity that his/her physical integrity is at risk due to malicious acts of others (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her reputation is endangered by malicious acts of others (Primary)
- Feels that other people pull a prank on him/her, make fun of him/her, mock him/her or play a trick on him/her (Primary)
- Feels being monitored (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels being alone in the world (Primary)
- Feels that others may unfairly accuse him/her for his/her acts or omissions (Primary) (Excl.)
- Does not feel others as real or genuine (as if they are in disguise, fake or play a role) (Primary)
- Feels somatic symptoms that worry him/her (tachycardia, somatic aches, breathing difficulties, skin itching etc.) (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels that his/her body or certain organs do not function properly or have undergone some distortion of their physical state (Primary)
- Feels that someone can affect his/her body by distorting it in some way (Primary)
- Feels that his/her somatic senses are the byproduct of someone or something else’s actions (they are caused by someone or something outside himself/herself) (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that some parts of his/her body or organs or even his/her entire body are not his/hers (Primary)
- Does not feel the existence of parts of his/her body or organs or even his/her entire body (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that in order to make even simple movements for example walk or grasp something, he/she has to exert a lot of effort (Secondary)
- Feels that the movements he/she makes are not his/hers (feels that he/she lacks the ownership of movements he/she makes (Primary)
- Feels that the senses of his/her body are not his/hers (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her body or some parts of it (face, nose, limbs) have changed or are changing (Primary)
- Feels his/her mind is confused (Secondary)
- Feels difficulty in concentrating (Secondary)
- Feels that he/she does not feel his/her feelings (Primary)
- Feels difficulty remembering (Secondary)
- Feels that he/she cannot easily make simple decisions (Secondary)
- Feels that he/she has to exert effort in order to understand things once considered self-evident (Secondary)
- Feels that his/her mind is empty or being emptied from thoughts (Secondary)
- Feels that his/her mind is flooded by thoughts without being able to control it (Secondary)
- Feels that words that once had no significance to him/her have now acquired a deeper meaning that is now important for him/her to understand (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her attention becomes easily distracted by unrelated things and he/she cannot control it (Secondary)
- Feels that he/she must exert a lot of effort to do things he/she once did without thinking about it (Secondary)
- Feels that he/she can hear his/her thoughts (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her mind abruptly stops thinking (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that inside him/her, he/she is inanimate (Primary)
- Feels that he/she is not in control of his/her mind (Primary)
- Feels that some of his/her thoughts are not his/hers, but were in a way inserted in his/her mind (Primary)
- Feels that the others can in some way “read” his/her thoughts (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her movements are being controlled from the outside (like a puppet on a string) (Primary)
- Feels that his/her feelings are being controlled by someone else or something else (Primary)
- Feels that he/she no longer feels himself/herself (Primary)
- Feels that he/she has sinned and is guilty of something very important (Primary)
- Feels that he/she has acquired or possesses special/supernatural abilities or forces (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that his/her life has suddenly acquired a special significance/destination/mission (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels that the entire world around him/her has somehow or in some way changed (Primary)
- Feels that the world around him/her and its constituents are not what they are supposed to be (as if they were a theatrical scenery) (Primary)
- Feels that the world or objects that surround him/her are not real or genuine (as if they are fake) (Primary)
- Feels that things around him/her once indifferent to him/her are not coincidental, and have a specific meaning that he/she cannot ignore and must definitely understand (Primary)
- Feels that the world is mysterious and has a meaning he/she must discover (Primary)
- Feels that living beings around him/her are inanimate (Primary) (Excl.)
- Feels anxiety, fear or premonition that a big disaster has already or is about to happen (Primary)
- Feels that there is a direct connection between him/her and the world around him/her; irrelevant events acquire special personal meaning, become “signs” to him/her (Primary)
- Feels that whatever he/she thinks may happen to the world (Primary)
- Feels that there is no separating boundary between himself/herself and the others; feels unprotected, exposed, almost transparent against the intentions and moods of others (Primary)
- Feels that there is no boundary between him/her and the world; whatever lies inside him/her is reflected on the outside and vice versa (Primary)
- Feels anxiety and fear attributed to existing hallucinatory experiences and their content (auditory, visual, olfactory, tactile etc.) (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels anxiety, fear, anger, rage or sorrow related to the content of the delusional ideas and beliefs (for example, is afraid to be hospitalized holding that doctors are secret agents or is afraid to eat his/her mother’s food holding that she intends to poison him/her or feels rage over his/her persecutors) (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels anxiety and uneasiness that he/she cannot attribute somewhere (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels anxiety and fear for real problems (health, financial, etc.) (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels uneasiness for possible future problems (uneasiness in the possibility of a beloved person’s illness, his/her own (possibility of) illness or a possible financial catastrophe, etc.) (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels a feeling of inner tension and strain (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels anxiety and uneasiness vaguely attributed to “what is happening to him/her”, including difficulties in his/her thinking and general functioning (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels anxiety, sadness or disappointment related to the fact that the others do not empathize with what is happening to him/her (Gen. Anxiety)
- Feels feelings that he/she describes as surprise, ecstasy, astonishment or bewilderment and puzzlement directly related to his/her experiences (Primary)
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Gender N (%) | Men 32 (58.2) | |
Women 23 (41.8) | ||
Age, mean (SD) | 37.8 (11.3) | |
Years of education, mean (SD) | 14.5 (2.9) | |
Number of hospitalizations, mean (SD) | 1.2 (2.2) | |
Months of current disease, mean (SD) | 5.7 (10.8) | |
Years of disease, mean (SD) | 10 (9.6) | |
Years of disease | ≤1 | 13 (25.5) |
≤3 | 20 (39.2) | |
≥4 | 31 (60.8) | |
Antipsychotic doses equivalent to 100 mg/day of chlorpromazine at discharge, mean (SD) | 533.1 (198.7) | |
WAIS (full IQ estimated score) | 100.1 (13.4) | |
Vocabulary score | 11.7 (1.9) | |
Block design | 9.7 (2.9) |
Scale | Mean (SD) |
---|---|
PAS | |
PAS total score | 197.74 (122.85) |
Primary feelings | 92.71 (72.07) |
Secondary feelings | 50.35 (37.75) |
General anxiety feelings | 54.68 (29.8) |
PANSS | |
PANSS total score | 73.15 (19.29) |
PANSS positive score | 19.62 (6.84) |
PANSS negative score | 14.79 (6.77) |
PANSS general psychopathology score | 38.27 (9.55) |
PANSS/delusions | 4.93 (1.36) |
PANSS/hallucinations | 2.96 (2.20) |
PANSS/anxiety | 4.25 (1.31) |
PANSS/guilt feelings | 2.56 (1.61) |
PANSS/tension | 3.33 (1.48) |
PANSS/depression | 2.64 (1.56) |
PANSS/active social avoidance | 2.93 (1.85) |
CDSS | |
CDSS total score | 5.66 (6.07) |
HAMILTON-Anxiety | |
HAM-A total score | 17.36 (11.63) |
BABS | |
BABS total score | 14.25 (5.03) |
babs1_conviction | 2.80 (1.16) |
babs2_perception of other views | 1.63 (1.03) |
babs3_explanation of differing views | 2.44 (1.11) |
babs4_fixity | 2.40 (1.08) |
babs5_disproval of ideas | 2.75 (1.21) |
babs6_insight | 2.25 (1.24) |
BARNES Scale | |
Barnes total score | 0.21 (0.51) |
Primary Feelings | Secondary Feelings | General Anxiety Feelings | Total PAS Score | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PANSS Total score | r | 0.37 | 0.46 | 0.35 | 0.44 |
p | 0.02 | 0.00 | 0.03 | 0.01 | |
PANSS Positive score | r | 0.35 | 0.11 | 0.41 | 0.34 |
p | 0.02 | 0.48 | 0.01 | 0.03 | |
PANSS Negative score | r | 0.03 | 0.25 | −0.03 | 0.09 |
p | 0.83 | 0.10 | 0.87 | 0.50 | |
PANSS General Psychopathology Score | r | 0.39 | 0.54 | 0.43 | 0.50 |
p | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.01 | 0.00 | |
PANSS Delusion Item | rho | 0.33 | 0.00 | 0.41 | 0.26 |
p | 0.02 | 0.98 | 0.00 | 0.08 | |
PANSS Hallucination Item | rho | 0.18 | 0.16 | 0.31 | 0.23 |
p | 0.23 | 0.30 | 0.04 | 0.12 | |
PANSS Anxiety | rho | 0.33 | 0.16 | 0.48 | 0.35 |
p | 0.03 | 0.30 | 0.00 | 0.02 | |
PANSS Guilt | rho | 0.38 | 0.46 | 0.33 | 0.47 |
p | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.03 | 0.00 | |
PANSS Depression | rho | 0.39 | 0.44 | 0.38 | 0.46 |
p | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.01 | 0.00 | |
PANSS Active Social Avoidance | rho | 0.34 | 0.55 | 0.29 | 0.49 |
p | 0.02 | <0.00 | 0.05 | 0.00 | |
CDSS Scale | rho | 0.54 | 0.56 | 0.59 | 0.65 |
p | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | |
HAM-Anxiety Scale | rho | 0.66 | 0.53 | 0.68 | 0.72 |
p | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | |
BABS Total Score | rho | 0.34 | 0.04 | 0.21 | 0.27 |
p | 0.05 | 0.81 | 0.21 | 0.12 | |
babs1 Conviction | rho | 0.36 | 0.21 | 0.29 | 0.36 |
p | 0.02 | 0.19 | 0.07 | 0.02 | |
Barnes Total Score (Akathisia) | rho | −0.08 | −0.12 | 0.01 | −0.14 |
p | 0.59 | 0.44 | 0.97 | 0.39 |
Primary Feelings (PAS) | Secondary Feelings (PAS) | General Anxiety Feelings (PAS) | Total PAS Score | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N | Mean (SD) | N | Mean (SD) | N | Mean (SD) | N | Mean (SD) | |
T1 | 45 | 104.0 (73.4) | 45 | 54.9 (39.2) | 45 | 61.3 (27.9) | 45 | 220.2 (122.8) |
T2 | 18 | 58.7 (60.4) | 18 | 32.8 (26.6) | 18 | 34.8 (23.3) | 18 | 126.3 (101.6) |
T3 | 33 | 20.3 (30.2) | 33 | 18.9 (24.1) | 33 | 26.4 (24.6) | 33 | 65.6 (71.2) |
T2 vs. T1 | T3 vs. T1 | T3 vs. T2 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
β (SE) 1 | p | β (SE) 1 | p | β (SE) 1 | p | |
Primary feelings | −63.1 (11.7) | <0.001 | −81.7 (9.2) | <0.001 | −18.7 (12.4) | 0.13 |
Secondary feelings | −27.8 (5.9) | <0.001 | −36.0 (4.6) | <0.001 | −8.3 (6.3) | 0.19 |
General anxiety feelings | −30.6 (5.4) | <0.001 | −34.6 (4.2) | <0.001 | −4.1 (5.7) | 0.48 |
Total PAS score | −124.9 (18.1) | <0.001 | −152.2 (14.1) | <0.001 | −27.3 (19.0) | 0.15 |
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Margariti, M.M.; Vlachos, I.I.; Mpourazana, D.; Aristotelidis, P.; Selakovic, M.; Ifanti, M.; Papageorgiou, C. Psychotic Arousal and the Psychopathology of Acute Schizophrenia: An Exploratory Study of the Experiential Emotional State in Acute Psychosis. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 5477. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13185477
Margariti MM, Vlachos II, Mpourazana D, Aristotelidis P, Selakovic M, Ifanti M, Papageorgiou C. Psychotic Arousal and the Psychopathology of Acute Schizophrenia: An Exploratory Study of the Experiential Emotional State in Acute Psychosis. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(18):5477. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13185477
Chicago/Turabian StyleMargariti, Maria M., Ilias I. Vlachos, Dimitra Mpourazana, Panagiotis Aristotelidis, Mirjana Selakovic, Maria Ifanti, and Charalambos Papageorgiou. 2024. "Psychotic Arousal and the Psychopathology of Acute Schizophrenia: An Exploratory Study of the Experiential Emotional State in Acute Psychosis" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 18: 5477. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13185477