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Psychotic Arousal and the Psychopathology of Acute Schizophrenia. An Exploratory Study of the Experiential Emotional State in Acute Psychosis

Maria Margariti, Ilias Vlachos, Dimitra Mpourazana, Panagiotis Aristotelidis, Miriana Selakoviz, Maria Ifanti, Charalambos Papageorgiou

Preprints.org August 7, 2024 preprint DOI: 10.20944/preprints202408.0499.v1 via OpenAlex

Summary

Emotional brain system dysfunction may contribute to schizophrenia, but emotions are often overlooked in its study. Psychotic arousal (PA) is a proposed construct capturing the experiential emotional state of acute psychosis, linked to delusion formation and maintenance. In 55 acute schizophrenia patients, the Psychotic Arousal Scale showed internal reliability and associations with other affective measures, delusion conviction, and sensitivity to antipsychotic treatment over three weeks. Results suggest PA is a discrete state involving abnormal experiential feelings, responsive to early antipsychotic intervention, and highlights an overlooked emotional dimension in acute psychosis.

Study at a glance

Design observational cohort
Sample size 55
Population acute schizophrenia patients
Key finding Psychotic arousal, as measured by the Psychotic Arousal Scale, is a discrete state involving abnormal experiential feelings, correlates with delusion conviction and other affective measures, and is sensitive to antipsychotic treatment early in acute psychosis.

Abstract

Background: Increasing research data suggests that dysfunction of emotional brain systems may be an important contributor for the psychophysiology of schizophrenia. However, contemporary psychopathology consistently underestimates the role of emotions in the phenomenology of the disease. Psychotic arousal (PA) is a conceptually-defined psychopathological construct aimed to portray the experiential emotional state of acute psychosis. The concept provides an explanatory model for the emergence of psychosis, and the formation and maintenance of delusions based on neurobiological models on the formation of core consciousness and subjectivity. This is the first exploratory study of the major assumptions, endorsed in the project summarised as follows: 1) Psychotic arousal is a discrete state, eligible to investigation; 2) Abnormal experiential feelings are an integral part of this state; 3) The state is responsive to antipsychotic intervention during the first weeks of treatment.Methods: We developed accordingly the Psychotic Arousal Scale (PAS), explored its first psychometric properties and tested its relation to other psychopathological measures. 55 acute schizophrenia patients were evaluated with the PAS, the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, the Brown Assessment of Beliefs Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety, and the Calgary Depression. Cronbach α coefficients, t- test analysis, correlations and mixed linear regression models were applied for testing internal reliability of the scale, associations between parameters and sensitivity to change in three time periods during therapeutic intervention.Results: Results of the study support that (PA) is eligible for investigation as a discrete psychopathological state, abnormal experiential feelings are an integral part of this state, it presents high affinity with other affective measures, its degree of severity relates to the delusions’ conviction, and is amenable to antipsychotics early in treatment during the acute psychotic episode.Conclusions: Findings of this exploratory study are connotative of the presence of an emotional arousal impregnated by abnormal experiential feelings during acute psychosis, largely overlooked by contemporary psychopathology.

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