Schizophrenia spectrum disorders: does the non-psychotic schizophrenia exist?

Current understanding of schizophrenia comes from Kraepelin’s dementia praecox doctrine, a disease that combined Kalbaum’s catatonia, Hecker’s hebephrenia and chronic delusional psychoses and later renamed to schizophrenia thanks to Bleuler. Since the beginning of the XX century, the systematics of schizophrenia has undergone a serious evolution and narrowing of diagnostic boundaries, which is reflected in various revisions of the ICD and editions of the DSM. Currently, the existence of non-psychotic forms of schizophrenia, mainly manifested by negative symptoms, is being questioned. In addition, the need for diagnostic differentiation of schizophrenia from autism spectrum disorder, which have only external similarities, but require fundamentally different therapeutic interventions, is emphasized. © Eco-Vector, 2024.

Authors
Sivolap Y.P. , Portnova A.A.
Number of issue
3
Language
Russian
Pages
240-246
Status
Published
Volume
56
Year
2024
Organizations
  • 1 Depart. of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatic Pathology, RUDN University, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • 2 Scientific and Practical Center for Child Psychoneurology, Moscow, Russian Federation
Keywords
antipsychotics; dementia praecox; DSM-5; ICD-10; ICD-11; schizophrenia; schizophrenia spectrum disorders; schizotypal personality disorder
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