Thought disorder


A thought disorder is any disturbance in cognition that adversely affects language and thought content, and thereby communication. A variety of thought disorders were said to be characteristic of people with schizophrenia. A content-thought disorder is typically characterised by the experience of multiple delusional fragments.
The term, thought disorder, is often used to refer to a formal thought disorder.
A formal thought disorder is a disruption of the form or structure of thought. Formal thought disorder also known as disorganised thinking results in disorganised speech, and is recognised as a major feature of schizophrenia, and other psychoses. FTD is also associated with other conditions including mood disorders, dementia, mania, and neurological diseases.
Types of thought disorder include derailment, pressured speech, poverty of speech, tangentiality, and thought blocking.
Formal thought disorder is a disorder of the form of thought rather than of content of thought that covers hallucinations and delusions. FTD unlike hallucinations and delusions, is an observable objective sign of psychosis. FTD is a common, and core symptom of a psychotic disorder and may be seen as a marker of its severity, and also as a predictor of prognosis. It reflects a cluster of cognitive, linguistic, and affective disturbances, that has generated research interest from the fields of cognitive neuroscience, neurolinguistics, and psychiatry.
Eugen Bleuler, who named schizophrenia, held that thought disorder was its defining characteristic. However, disturbances of thinking and speech such as clanging or echolalia may be present in Tourette syndrome, or other symptoms as found in delirium. A clinical difference exists between these two groups. Those with psychoses are less likely to show an awareness or concern about the disordered thinking, while those with other disorders do show awareness and concerns about not being able to think straight.

Content-thought disorder

Content-thought disorder is a thought disturbance in which a person experiences multiple, fragmented delusions, typically a feature of schizophrenia, and some other mental disorders including obsessive–compulsive disorder, and mania.
Content-thought disorder is not limited to delusions, other possible abnormalities include
preoccupation,
obsession,
compulsion,
magical thinking,
overvalued ideas,
ideas of reference
or influence, persecutory ideas,
phobias,
suicidal ideas, violent ideas, and homicidal ideas.
The cores of thought content disturbance are abnormal beliefs and convictions, after accounting for the person's culture and backgrounds, and range from overvalued ideas to fixed delusions. Typically, abnormal beliefs and delusions are non-specific diagnostically,
even if some delusions are more prevalent in one disorder than another.
Also, normal, or neurotypical, thoughtconsisting of awareness, concerns, beliefs, preoccupations, wishes, fantasies, imagination, and conceptscan be illogical, and can contain beliefs and prejudices/biases that are obviously contradictory.
Individuals also have considerable variations, and the same person's thinking also may shift considerably from time to time.
In psychosis, delusions are the most common thought-content abnormalities.
A delusion is a firm and fixed belief based on inadequate grounds not amendable to rational argument or evidence to the contrary, and not in sync with regional, cultural and educational background. Common examples in mental status examination include:
erotomanic,
grandiose,
persecutory,
reference,
thought broadcasting,
thought insertion,
thought withdrawal,
outside control,
infidelity,
somatic,
and nihilistic.
Delusions are common in people with mania, depression, schizoaffective disorder, delirium, dementia, substance use disorder, schizophrenia, and delusional disorders

Formal thought disorder

Formal thought disorder, or simply thought disorder, is also known as disorganized speech – evident from disorganized thinking, and is one of the hallmark features of schizophrenia. Formal thought disorder is a disorder of the form of thought rather than of content of thought that covers hallucinations and delusions. FTD unlike hallucinations and delusions, is an observable objective sign of psychosis. FTD is a common, and core symptom of a psychotic disorder and may be seen as a marker of its severity, and also as a predictor of prognosis. It reflects a cluster of cognitive, linguistic, and affective disturbances, that has generated research interest from the fields of cognitive neuroscience, neurolinguistics, and psychiatry.
FTD is a complex, multidimensional syndrome characterized by deficiencies in the logical organizing of thought needed to achieve goals. FTD can be subdivided into clusters of positive and negative symptoms, as well as objective versus subjective symptoms. Within the scale of positive and negative symptoms they have been grouped into positive formal thought disorder and negative formal thought disorder.. Positive subtypes were those of pressure of speech, tangentiality, derailment, incoherence, and illogicality. Negative subtypes were those of poverty of speech and poverty of content. The two groups were posited to be at either end of a spectrum of normal speech. However, later studies showed these to be poorly correlated. A comprehensive measure of formal thought disorder is the Thought and Language Disorder Scale.
Nancy Andreasen preferred to call the thought disorders collectively as thought-language-communication disorders.
Within the Thought, Language, Communication Scale up to seven domains of FTD have been described with most of the variance accounted for by just two or three domains. Some TLC disorders are more suggestive of a severe disorder and given priority by listing them in the first 11 items.
It has been proposed that formal thought disorder relates to neurocognition via semantic memory. Semantic network impairment in people with schizophreniameasured by the difference between fluency and phonological fluency predicts severity of formal thought disorder, suggesting that verbal information is unavailable. Other hypotheses include working memory deficit and attentional focus.

Signs and symptoms

In the general population there will always be abnormalities in language, and their presence or absence is therefore not diagnostic of any condition. Language abnormalities can occur in schizophrenia and other disorders such as mania or depression, and can also occur in anybody who may simply be tired or stressed. To distinguish thought disorder, patterns of speech, severity of symptoms, their frequency, and resulting functional impairment can be considered.
Symptoms of thought disorder include derailment, pressured speech, poverty of speech, tangentiality, and thought blocking. FTD is a hallmark feature of schizophrenia, but is also associated with other conditions including mood disorders, dementia, mania, and neurological diseases. Impaired attention, poor memory, and difficulty formulating abstract concepts may also reflect thought disorder, and can be observed or assessed with mental status tests such as serial sevens or memory tests.

Types

There are many types of thought disorder. They are also referred to as symptoms of formal thought disorder of which 30 are described including:
Some recent psychiatric/psychological glossaries defined thought disorder as disturbed thinking or cognition that affects communication, language, or thought content including poverty of ideas, neologisms, paralogia, word salad, and delusions
which are disturbance of both thought content and thought formand suggested the more specific terms of content thought disorder and formal thought disorder,
with content thought disorder defined as a thought disturbance characterized by multiple fragmented delusions, and formal thought disorder defined as disturbance in the form or structure of thinking.
For example, DSM-5 only used the word formal thought disorder, mostly as a synonym of disorganized thinking and disorganized speech.
This is in contrast with ICD-10 which only used the word "thought disorder", always accompanied with "delusion" and "hallucination" separately,
and a general medical dictionary that although generally defined thought disorders similarly to the psychiatric glossaries,
but also used the word in other entries as ICD-10 did.
The recent psychiatric text also mentioned when describing thought disorder as a "disorganization syndrome" within the context of schizophrenia:
The same text also mentioned that some clinicians use the term "formal thought disorder" broadly referring to abnormalities in thought form plus any psychotic cognitive sign or symptom,
and that various studies examining cognition and subsymdromes in schizophrenia may refer to formal thought disorder as "conceptual disorganization" or "disorganization factor."
Still, there may be other dissenting opinions, including:

Course, diagnosis, and prognosis

It was believed that thought disorder occurred only in schizophrenia, but later findings indicate it may occur in other psychiatric conditions including mania, and occurs even in people without mental illness. Also, people with schizophrenia don't all exhibit thought disorder, so not having any thought disorder doesn't mean the person doesn't have schizophrenia, i.e. the condition is not very specific to the disease.
When adopting specific definitions of thought disorder subtypes and classifying them as positive and negative symptoms, Nancy Andreasen found
that different subtypes of thought disorder occur at different frequencies among those with manic, depression, and schizophrenia. People with mania have pressured speech as the most prominent symptom, but also have relatively high rates of derailment, tangentiality, and incoherence which are as prominent as in those with schizophrenia. They are likelier to have pressured speech, distractibility, and circumstantiality.
People with schizophrenia have more negative thought disorder including poverty of speech and poverty of content of speech, but also have relatively high rates of certain positive thought disorders.
Derailment, loss of goal, poverty of content of speech, tangentiality and illogicality are particularly characteristic of schizophrenia.
People with depression have relatively less thought disorders; the most prominent are poverty of speech, poverty of content of speech, and circumstantiality. She found the diagnostic usefulness of dividing the symptoms into subtypes, such as having negative thought disorders without the full affective symptoms highly suggest schizophrenia.
She also found prognostic values of negative/positive symptom divisions. In manic patients, most thought disorders return to normal levels 6 months after evaluation which suggests that thought disorders in this condition, although as severe as in schizophrenia, tend to be recoverable. In people with schizophrenia, however, negative thought disorders remain after six months, and sometimes worsen. Positive thought disorders get better somewhat. Also, negative thought disorder is a good predictor of some outcomes, e.g. patients with prominent negative thought disorders do worse on social functioning six months later.
So, in general, having more prominent negative symptoms suggest a worse outcome. Nevertheless, some people may do well, respond to medication, and have normal brain function. The positive symptoms are similar vice versa.
At illness onset, prominent thought disorder also predicts worse prognosis, including:
Thought disorder unresponsive to treatment also predicts worse illness course.
In schizophrenia, thought disorders' severity tend to be more stable than hallucinations and delusions. Prominent thought disorders are more unlikely to diminish in middle age compared to positive symptoms.
Less severe thought disorder may occur during the prodromal and residual periods of schizophrenia.
DSM-5 include delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thought process, and disorganized or abnormal motor behavior as key symptoms in "psychosis." Although not specific to different diagnoses, some aspects of psychosis are characteristic of some diagnoses.
Schizophrenia spectrum disorders typically consist of prominent hallucinations and/or delusions as well as formal thought disorderdisplayed as severe behavioral abnormalities including disorganized, bizarre, and catatonic behavior.
Psychotic disorders due to general medical conditions and substance-induced psychotic disorders typically consist of delusions and/or hallucinations.
Delusional disorder and shared psychotic disorder, which are more rare, typically consist of persistent delusions.
Research found that most formal thought disorders are commonly found in schizophrenia and mood disorders, but poverty of speech content is more common in schizophrenia.
Experienced clinicians may distinguish true psychosis, such as in schizophrenia, and bipolar mania, from malingering, when an individual fakes illness for other gains, by clinical presentations. For example, malingerers feign thought contents with no irregularities in form such as derailment or looseness of associations. Negative symptoms including alogia may not be present. In addition, chronic thought disorder is typically distressing.
Typically, autism spectrum disorders, whose diagnosis requires onset of symptoms prior to 3 years of age, can be distinguished from early-onset schizophrenia by disease onset occurrence and the fact that ASD patients don't display formal thought disorders.
However, it has been suggested that individuals with autism spectrum disorders display language disturbances like those found in schizophrenia; a 2008 study found that children and adolescents with ASD showed significantly more illogical thinking and loose associations than control subjects. The illogical thinking was related to cognitive functioning and executive control; the loose associations were related to communication symptoms and to parent reports of stress and anxiety.

Criticisms

The concept of thought disorder has been criticized as being based on circular or incoherent definitions. For example, symptoms of thought disorder are inferred from disordered speech, based on the assumption that disordered speech arises because of disordered thought. Incoherence, or word salad, refers to speech that is semantically unconnected and conveys no meaning to the listener.
Furthermore, although thought disorder is typically associated with psychosis, similar phenomena can appear in different disorders, potentially leading to misdiagnosis—for example, in the case of incomplete yet potentially fruitful thought processes.
Another criticism related to the separation of symptoms of schizophrenia into negative/positive symptoms, including thought disorder, is that it oversimplifies the complexity of thought disorder and its relationship with other positive symptoms. Later factor analysis studies found that negative symptoms tend to correlate with one another, while positive symptoms tend to separate into two groups.
The three clusters became roughly known as negative symptoms, psychotic symptoms, and disorganization symptoms.
Alogia, a thought disorder traditionally classified as a negative symptom, can be separated into two separate groups: poverty of speech content as a disorganization symptom, and poverty of speech, response latency, and thought blocking as negative symptoms.
Nevertheless, the efforts that led to the positive/negative symptom diametrics may allow the more accurate characterization of schizophrenia in the later works.

Other references

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