Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox medical condition (new) A thought disorder (TD) is a disturbance in cognition which affects language, thought and communication.<ref name="Hart">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="APA1">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> Psychiatric and psychological glossaries in 2015 and 2017 identified thought disorders as encompassing poverty of ideas, paralogia (a reasoning disorder characterized by expression of illogical or delusional thoughts), word salad, and delusions—all disturbances of thought content and form. Two specific terms have been suggested—content thought disorder (CTD) and formal thought disorder (FTD). CTD has been defined as a thought disturbance characterized by multiple fragmented delusions, and the term thought disorder is often used to refer to an FTD:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> a disruption of the form (or structure) of thought.<ref name="APA3">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> Also known as disorganized thinking, FTD results in disorganized speech and is recognized as a major feature of schizophrenia and other psychoses<ref name="APA4">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref><ref name="DSM-5">Template:Cite book</ref> (including mood disorders, dementia, mania, and neurological diseases).<ref name="Saddock-thought disorder" /><ref name="APA4"/><ref name="Roche">Template:Cite journal</ref> Disorganized speech leads to an inference of disorganized thought.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Thought disorders include derailment,<ref name="APA5">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> pressured speech, poverty of speech, tangentiality, verbigeration, and thought blocking.<ref name="Roche"/> One of the first known public presentations of thought disorders, or specifically OCD as it is known today, was in 1691. Bishop John Moore gave a speech before Queen Mary II, about "religious melancholy."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Formal thought disorder affects the form (rather than the content) of thought.<ref name="Kircher1">Template:Cite journal</ref> Unlike hallucinations and delusions, it is an observable, objective sign of psychosis.<ref name="Kircher1" /> FTD is a common core symptom of a psychotic disorder, and may be seen as a marker of severity and as an indicator of prognosis.<ref name="Roche"/><ref name="Bora">Template:Cite journal</ref> It reflects a cluster of cognitive, linguistic, and affective disturbances that have generated research interest in the fields of cognitive neuroscience, neurolinguistics, and psychiatry.<ref name="Roche"/>

Eugen Bleuler, who named schizophrenia, said that TD was its defining characteristic.<ref name="Colman">Colman, A. M. (2001) Oxford Dictionary of Psychology, Oxford University Press. Template:ISBN</ref> Disturbances of thinking and speech, such as clanging or echolalia, may also be present in Tourette syndrome;<ref name="Barrera 2009">Template:Cite journal</ref> other symptoms may be found in delirium.<ref name="NobleGreene1996">Template:Cite book</ref> A clinical difference exists between these two groups. Patients with psychoses are less likely to show awareness or concern about disordered thinking, and those with other disorders are aware and concerned about not being able to think clearly.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Template:AnchorContent thought disorderEdit

Thought content is the subject of an individual's thoughts, or the types of ideas expressed by the individual.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Mental health professionals define normal thought content as the absence of significant abnormalities, distortions, or harmful thoughts.<ref name=":9" /> Normal thought content aligns with reality, is appropriate to the situation, and does not cause significant distress or impair functioning.<ref name=":9">Template:Cite journal</ref>

A person's cultural background must be considered when assessing thought content. Abnormalities in thought content differ across cultures.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Specific types of abnormal thought content can be features of different psychiatric illnesses.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Examples of disordered thought content include:

  • Suicidal thinking: thoughts of ending one's own life.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Homicidal thinking: thoughts of ending the life of another.<ref name=":1" />
  • Delusion: A fixed, false belief that a person holds despite contrary evidence and that is not a shared cultural belief.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" />
  • Paranoid ideation: thoughts, not severe enough to be considered delusions, involving excessive suspicion or the belief that one is being harassed, persecuted, or unfairly treated.<ref name=":7">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Preoccupation: excessive and/or distressing thoughts that are stressor-related and associated with negative emotions.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • Obsession: a repetitive thought that is intrusive or inappropriate and distressing or upsetting.<ref name=":0" />
  • Compulsion: A repeated behavior or mental act done in response to an obsession. It aims to reduce anxiety or distress. But, it is not feasibly related to the anxiety-provoking stimulus. It is excessive and distressing.<ref name=":7" />
  • Magical thinking: A false belief in a causal link between actions and events. The mistaken belief that one's thoughts, words, or actions can cause or prevent an outcome in a way that violates the laws of cause and effect.<ref name=":7" />
  • Overvalued ideas: false or exaggerated belief held with conviction, but without delusional intensity.
  • Phobias: irrational fears of objects or circumstances that are persistent.<ref name=":0" />
  • Poverty of thought: abnormally few thoughts and ideas expressed.<ref name=":0" />
  • Overabundance of thought: abnormally many thoughts and ideas expressed.<ref name=":0" />

Template:AnchorFormal thought disorderEdit

Thought process is a person's form, flow, and coherence of thinking.<ref name=":7" /> This is how they use language and put ideas together. A normal thought process is logical, linear, meaningful, and goal-directed.<ref name=":0" /> A logical, linear thought process is one that demonstrates rational connections between thoughts in a way that is sequential that allows others to understand.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":7" /> Thought process is not what a person thinks, rather it is how a person expresses their thoughts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Formal thought disorder (FTD), also known as disorganized speech or disorganized thinking, is a disorder of a person's thought process in which they are unable to express their thoughts in a logical and linear fashion.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> To be considered FTD, disorganized thinking must be severe enough that it impairs effective communication.<ref name=":8">Template:Cite book</ref> Disorganized speech is a core symptom of psychosis, and therefore can be a feature of any condition that has a potential to cause psychosis, including schizophrenia, mania, major depressive disorder, delirium, postpartum psychosis, major neurocognitive disorder, and substance induced psychosis.<ref name=":0" /> FTD reflects a cluster of cognitive, linguistic, and affective disturbances, and has generated research interest from the fields of cognitive neuroscience, neurolinguistics, and psychiatry.<ref name="Roche" />

It can be subdivided into clusters of positive and negative symptoms and objective (rather than subjective) symptoms.<ref name="Bora" /> On the scale of positive and negative symptoms, they have been grouped into positive formal thought disorder (posFTD) and negative formal thought disorder (negFTD).<ref name="Bora" /><ref name="Kircher1" /> Positive subtypes were pressure of speech, tangentiality, derailment, incoherence, and illogicality;<ref name="Bora" /> negative subtypes were poverty of speech and poverty of content.<ref name="Kircher1" /><ref name="Bora" /> The two groups were posited to be at either end of a spectrum of normal speech, but later studies showed them to be poorly correlated.<ref name="Kircher1" /> A comprehensive measure of FTD is the Thought and Language Disorder (TALD) Scale.<ref name="Kircher2">Template:Cite journal</ref> The Kiddie Formal Thought Disorder Rating Scale (K-FTDS) can be used to assess the presence of formal thought disorder in children and their childhood.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Although it is very extensive and time-consuming, its results are in great detail and reliable.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Nancy Andreasen preferred to identify TDs as thought-language-communication disorders (TLC disorders).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Andreasen">Template:Cite journal</ref> Up to seven domains of FTD have been described on the Thought, Language, Communication (TLC) Scale, with most of the variance accounted for by two or three domains.<ref name="Kircher1" /> Some TLC disorders are more suggestive of severe disorder, and are listed with the first 11 items.<ref name="Andreasen" />

DiagnosesEdit

The DSM-5 categorizes FTD as "a psychotic symptom, manifested as bizarre speech and communication." FTD may include incoherence, peculiar words, disconnected ideas, or a lack of unprompted content expected from normal speech.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Clinical psychologists typically assess FTD by initiating an exploratory conversation with patients and observing the patient's verbal responses.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

FTD is often used to establish a diagnosis of schizophrenia; in cross-sectional studies, 27 to 80 percent of patients with schizophrenia present with FTD. A hallmark feature of schizophrenia, it is also widespread amongst other psychiatric disorders; up to 60 percent of those with schizoaffective disorder and 53 percent of those with clinical depression demonstrate FTD, suggesting that it is not exclusive to schizophrenia. About six percent of healthy subjects exhibit a mild form of FTD.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders">Template:Cite journal</ref> The DSM-5-TR mentions that less severe FTD may happen during the initial (prodromal) and residual periods of schizophrenia.<ref name=":8" />

The characteristics of FTD vary amongst disorders. A number of studies indicate that FTD in mania is marked by irrelevant intrusions and pronounced combinatory thinking, usually with a playfulness and flippancy absent from patients with schizophrenia.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Solovay Comparative Studies of Thought">Template:Cite journal</ref> The FTD present in patients with schizophrenia was characterized by disorganization, neologism, and fluid thinking, and confusion with word-finding difficulty.<ref name="Solovay Comparative Studies of Thought"/>

There is limited data on the longitudinal course of FTD.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The most comprehensive longitudinal study of FTD by 2023 found a distinction in the longitudinal course of thought-disorder symptoms between schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. The study also found an association between pre-index assessmentsTemplate:Clarify of social, work and educational functioning and the longitudinal course of FTD.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Template:AnchorPossible causesEdit

Several theories have been developed to explain the causes of formal thought disorder. It has been proposed that FTD relates to neurocognition via semantic memory.<ref name=":2" /> Semantic network impairment in people with schizophreniaTemplate:Em dashmeasured by the difference between fluency (e.g. the number of animals' names produced in 60 seconds) and phonological fluency (e.g. the number of words beginning with "F" produced in 60 seconds)Template:Em dashpredicts the severity of formal thought disorder, suggesting that verbal information (through semantic priming) is unavailable.<ref name=":2" /> Other hypotheses include working memory deficit (being confused about what has already been said in a conversation) and attentional focus.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref>

FTD in schizophrenia has been found to be associated with structural and functional abnormalities in the language network, where structural studies have found bilateral grey matter deficits; deficits in the bilateral inferior frontal gyrus, bilateral inferior parietal lobule and bilateral superior temporal gyrus are FTD correlates.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/> Other studies did not find an association between FTD and structural aberrations of the language network, however, and regions not included in the language network have been associated with FTD.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/> Future research is needed to clarify whether there is an association with FTD in schizophrenia and neural abnormalities in the language network.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/>

Transmitter systems which might cause FTD have also been investigated. Studies have found that glutamate dysfunction, due to a rarefaction of glutamatergic synapses in the superior temporal gyrus in patients with schizophrenia, is a major cause of positive FTD.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/>

The heritability of FTD has been demonstrated in a number of family and twin studies. Imaging genetics studies, using a semantic verbal-fluency task performed by the participants during functional MRI scanning, revealed that alleles linked to glutamatergic transmission contribute to functional aberrations in typical language-related brain areas.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/> FTD is not solely genetically determined, however; environmental influences, such as allusive thinking in parents during childhood, and environmental risk factors for schizophrenia (including childhood abuse, migration, social isolation, and cannabis use) also contribute to the pathophysiology of FTD.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The origins of FTD have been theorised from a social-learning perspective. Singer and Wynne said that familial communication patterns play a key role in shaping the development of FTD; dysfunctional social interactions undermine a child's development of cohesive, stable mental representations of the world, increasing their risk of developing FTD.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

TreatmentsEdit

Antipsychotic medication is often used to treat FTD. Although the vast majority of studies of the efficacy of antipsychotic treatment do not report effects on syndromes or symptoms, six older studies report the effects of antipsychotic treatment on FTD.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> These studies and clinical experience indicate that antipsychotics are often an effective treatment for patients with positive or negative FTD, but not all patients respond to them.

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is another treatment for FTD, but its effectiveness has not been well-studied.<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/> Large randomised controlled trials evaluating the effectiveness of CBT for treating psychosis often exclude individuals with severe FTD because it reduces the therapeutic alliance required by the therapy.<ref name="Palmier-Claus Griffiths Murphy Cognitive behavioural therapy">Template:Cite journal</ref> However, provisional evidence suggests that FTD may not preclude the effectiveness of CBT.<ref name="Palmier-Claus Griffiths Murphy Cognitive behavioural therapy"/> Kircher and colleagues have suggested that the following methods should be used in CBT for patients with FTD:<ref name="Kircher Bröhl Meier Formal thought disorders"/>

  • Practice structuring, summarizing, and feedback methods
  • Repeat and clarify the core issues and main emotions that the patient is trying to communicate
  • Gently encourage patients to clarify what they are trying to communicate
  • Ask patients to clearly state their communication goal
  • Ask patients to slow down and explain how one point leads to another
  • Help patients identify the links between ideas
  • Identify the main affect linked to the thought disorder
  • Normalize problems with thinking

Signs and symptomsEdit

Language abnormalities exist in the general population, and do not necessarily indicate a condition.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> They can occur in schizophrenia and other disorders (such as mania or depression), or in anyone who may be tired or stressed.<ref name="Hart"/><ref name=TD2016-Boundaries>Template:Harvp</ref> To distinguish thought disorder, patterns of speech, severity of symptoms, their frequency, and any resulting functional impairment can be considered.<ref name="Andreasen"/>

Symptoms of FTD include derailment,<ref name="APA5"/> pressured speech, poverty of speech, tangentiality, and thought blocking.<ref name="Roche"/> The most common forms of FTD observed are tangentiality and circumstantiality.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> FTD is a hallmark feature of schizophrenia, but is also associated with other conditions that can cause psychosis (including mood disorders, dementia, mania, and neurological diseases).<ref name="APA3" /><ref name="Saddock-thought disorder" /><ref name=TD2016-Boundaries /> Impaired attention, poor memory, and difficulty formulating abstract concepts may also reflect TD, and can be observed and assessed with mental-status tests such as serial sevens or memory tests.<ref name=TD2016-Defn>Template:Harvp cited Template:Cite book</ref>

TypesEdit

Thirty symptoms (or features) of TD have been described, including:<ref>Template:Harvp</ref><ref name="Kircher1"/>

  • Alogia: A poverty of speech in amount or content, it is classified as a negative symptom of schizophrenia. When further classifying symptoms, poverty of speech content (little meaningful content with a normal amount of speech) is a disorganization symptom.<ref name="alogia as a disorganization symptom">Template:Harvp
  • "... In this way, alogia is conceived of as a 'negative thought disorder.' ..."
  • "... The paucity of meaningful content in the presence of a normal amount of speech that is sometimes included in alogia is actually a disorganization of thought and not a negative symptom and is properly included in the disorganization cluster of symptoms. ..."</ref> Under SANS, thought blocking is considered a part of alogia, and so is increased latency in response.<ref name=Sadock2008-Table-6-5>Template:Harvp</ref>
  • Circumstantial speech (also known as circumstantial thinking):<ref name="Sadock2017-Table7.1-6">Houghtalen, Rory P; McIntyre, John S (2017). "7.1 Psychiatric Interview, History, and Mental Status Examination of the Adult Patient". In Sadock, Virginia A; Sadock, Benjamin J; Ruiz, Pedro (eds.). Kaplan & Sadock's Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry (10th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. HISTORY AND EXAMINATION, Thought Process/Form, Table 7.1–6. Examples of Disordered Thought Process/Form. Template:ISBN. indicates and briefly defines the follow types: Clanging, Circumstantial, Derailment (loose associations), Flight of ideas, Incoherence (word salad), Neologism, Tangential, Thought blocking</ref> An inability to answer a question without excessive, unnecessary or irrelevant detail.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The point of the conversation is eventually reached, unlike in tangential speech.<ref name=":0" /> A patient may answer the question "How have you been sleeping lately?" with "Oh, I go to bed early, so I can get plenty of rest. I like to listen to music or read before bed. Right now I'm reading a good mystery. Maybe I'll write a mystery someday. But it isn't helping, reading I mean. I have been getting only 2 or 3 hours of sleep at night."<ref>Template:Harvp</ref>
  • Clanging: An instance where ideas are related only by phonetics (similar or rhyming sounds) rather than actual meaning.<ref name=":0" /><ref name="Videbeck">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Care">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> This may be heard as excessive rhyming or alliteration ("Many moldy mushrooms merge out of the mildewy mud on Mondays", or "I heard the bell. Well, hell, then I fell"). It is most commonly seen in the manic phase of bipolar disorder, although it is also often observed in patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder.

  • Derailment (also known as loosening of associations and knight's move thinking):<ref name=":0" /><ref name="Sadock2017-Table7.1-6" /> Thought frequently moves from one idea to another which is obliquely related or unrelated, often appearing in speech but also in writing<ref>Template:Harvp "derailment n. a symptom of thought disorder, often occurring in individuals with schizophrenia, marked by frequent interruptions in thought and jumping from one idea to another unrelated or indirectly related idea. It is usually manifested in speech (speech derailment) but can also be observed in writing. Derailment is essentially equivalent to loosening of associations. See cognitive derailment; thought derailment."</ref> ("The next day when I'd be going out you know, I took control, like uh, I put bleach on my hair in California"),<ref name="Distractible Speech p. 502">Template:Harvp</ref>
  • Distractible speech: In mid-speech, the subject is changed in response to a nearby stimulus ("Then I left San Francisco and moved to ... Where did you get that tie?")<ref name="Distractible Speech p. 502"/><ref name="APA8">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref>
  • Echolalia:<ref name=Sadock2008-Thought>Template:Harvp
  • "Form of Thought. Disorders of the form of thought are objectively observable in patients' spoken and written language. The disorders include looseness of associations, derailment, incoherence, tangentiality, circumstantiality, neologisms, echolalia, verbigeration, word salad, and mutism."
  • "Thought Process. ... Disorders of thought process include flight of ideas, thought blocking, impaired attention, poverty of thought content, poor abstraction abilities, perseveration, idiosyncratic associations (e.g., identical predicates and clang associations), overinclusion, and circumstantiality."

</ref> Echoing of another's speech,<ref name=Videbeck/> once or in repetition. It may involve repeating only the last few words (or the last word) of another person's sentences,<ref name="Sadock2008-Thought" /> and is common on the autism spectrum and in Tourette syndrome.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Pn</ref><ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Pn</ref>

  • Evasion: The next logical idea in a sequence is replaced with another idea closely (but not accurately or appropriately) related to it; also known as paralogia and perverted logic.<ref name="APA6">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref><ref>Template:Harvp "evasion ... consists of suppressing an idea that is next in a thought series and replacing it with another idea closely related to it. Also called paralogia; perverted logic."</ref>
  • Flight of ideas:<ref name=Sadock2017-Table7.1-6 /> A form of FTD marked by abrupt leaps from one topic to another, possibly with discernible links between successive ideas, perhaps governed by similarities between subjects or by rhyming, puns, wordplay, or innocuous environmental stimuli (such as the sound of birds chirping). It is most characteristic of the manic phase of bipolar disorder.<ref name=Videbeck />
  • Illogicality:<ref name=K&S-Concise-2008-Table-6-6>Template:Harvp includes and defines Derailment, Tangentiality, Incoherence, Illogicality, Circumstantiality, Pressure of speech, Distractible speech, Clanging.</ref> Conclusions are reached which do not follow logically (non sequiturs or faulty inferences). "Do you think this will fit in the box?" is answered with, "Well of course; it's brown, isn't it?"
  • Incoherence (word salad):<ref name=Sadock2017-Table7.1-6 /> Speech which is unintelligible because the individual words are real, but the manner in which they are strung together results in gibberish.<ref name=Videbeck/> The question "Why do people comb their hair?" elicits a response like "Because it makes a twirl in life, my box is broken help me blue elephant. Isn't lettuce brave? I like electrons, hello please!"
  • Neologisms:<ref name=Sadock2017-Table7.1-6 /> Completely new words (or phrases) whose origins and meanings are usually unrecognizable ("I got so angry I picked up a dish and threw it at the geshinker").<ref>Template:Harvp</ref> They may also involve elisions of two words which are similar in meaning or sound.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Although neologisms may refer to words formed incorrectly whose origins are understandable (such as "headshoe" for "hat"), these can be more clearly referred to as word approximations.<ref>Template:Harvp</ref>
  • Overinclusion:<ref name=Sadock2008-Thought /> The failure to eliminate ineffective, inappropriate, irrelevant, extraneous details associated with a particular stimulus.<ref name="Akiskal2016-Speech and Thought">Template:Cite book
  • "This form of thought is most characteristic of mania and tends to be overinclusive, with difficulty in excluding irrelevant, extraneous details from the association."</ref><ref>Template:Harvp overinclusion n. failure of an individual to eliminate ineffective or inappropriate responses associated with a particular stimulus.</ref>
  • Perseveration:<ref name=Sadock2008-Thought /> Persistent repetition of words or ideas, even when another person tries to change the subject.<ref name=Videbeck/> ("It's great to be here in Nevada, Nevada, Nevada, Nevada, Nevada.") It may also involve repeatedly giving the same answer to different questions ("Is your name Mary?" "Yes." "Are you in the hospital?" "Yes." "Are you a table?" "Yes"). Perseveration can include palilalia and logoclonia, and may indicate an organic brain disease such as Parkinson's disease.<ref name="Sadock2008-Thought" />
  • Phonemic paraphasia: Mispronunciation; syllables out of sequence ("I slipped on the lice and broke my arm").<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • Pressured speech:<ref name="APA9">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> Rapid speech without pauses, which is difficult to interrupt.
  • Referential thinking: Viewing innocuous stimuli as having a specific meaning for the self<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> ("What's the time?" "It's 7 o'clock. That's my problem").
  • Semantic paraphasia: Substitution of inappropriate words ("I slipped on the coat, on the ice I mean, and broke my book").<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • Stilted speech:<ref name="Lewis2017-Thought Disorder"/> Speech characterized by words or phrases which are flowery, excessive, and pompous<ref name=Videbeck/> ("The attorney comported himself indecorously").
  • Tangential speech: Wandering from the topic and never returning to it, or providing requested information<ref name=Videbeck/><ref name="APA7">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> ("Where are you from?" "My dog is from England. They have good fish and chips there. Fish breathe through gills").
  • Thought blocking (also known as deprivation of thought and obstructive thought): An abrupt stop in the middle of a train of thought which may not be able to be continued.<ref name="APA Blocking">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref>
  • Verbigeration:<ref name=K&S2017-Continuity>Template:Harvp "Word salad describes the stringing together of words that seem to have no logical association, and verbigeration describes the disappearance of understandable speech, replaced by strings of incoherent utterances."</ref> Meaningless, stereotyped repetition of words or phrases which replace understandable speech; seen in schizophrenia.<ref name=K&S2017-Continuity /><ref>Template:Harvp</ref>

Template:AnchorTerminologyEdit

Psychiatric and psychological glossaries in 2015 and 2017 defined thought disorder' as disturbed thinking or cognition which affects communication, language, or thought content including poverty of ideas, neologisms, paralogia, word salad, and delusions<ref name="Saddock-thought disorder"> Template:Harvp "thought disorder Any disturbance of thinking that affects language, communication, or thought content; the hallmark feature of schizophrenia. Manifestations range from simple blocking and mild circumstantiality to profound loosening of associations, incoherence, and delusions; characterized by a failure to follow semantic and syntactic rules that is inconsistent with the person's education, intelligence, or cultural background."</ref><ref name="APA2">Template:Cite APA Dictionary</ref> (disturbances of thought content and form), and suggested the more-specific terms content thought disorder (CTD) and formal thought disorder (FTD).<ref name="APA1" /> CTD was defined as a TD characterized by multiple fragmented delusions,<ref name=K&S-content-thought-disorder> Template:Harvp "content thought disorder Disturbance in thinking in which a person exhibits delusions that may be multiple, fragmented, and bizarre."</ref><ref name=APA2/> and FTD was defined as a disturbance in the form or structure of thinking.<ref>Template:Harvp "formal thought disorder Disturbance in the form of thought rather than the content of thought; thinking characterized by loosened associations, neologisms, and illogical constructs; thought process is disordered, and the person is defined as psychotic. Characteristic of schizophrenia."</ref><ref>Template:Harvp "formal thought disorder disruptions in the form or structure of thinking. Examples include derailment and tangentiality. It is distinct from TD, in which the disturbance relates to thought content."</ref> The 2013 DSM-5 only used the term FTD, primarily as a synonym for disorganized thinking and speech.<ref>Template:Cite book

  • As the proper FTD: "Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders", Key Features That Define the Psychotic Disorders, Disorganized Thinking (Speech), p. 88 "Disorganized thinking (formal thought disorder) is typically inferred from the individual's speech. ..."
  • As possibly something else: "Dissociative Disorders", Differential Diagnosis, Psychotic disorders, p. 296 "... Dissociative experiences of identity fragmentation or possession, and of perceived loss of control over thoughts, feelings, impulses, and acts, may be confused with signs of formal thought disorder, such as thought insertion or withdrawal. ..."

</ref> This contrasts with the 1992 ICD-10 (which only used the word "thought disorder", always accompanied with "delusion" and "hallucination")<ref name="ICD-10">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}

  • F06.2 Organic delusional [schizophrenia-like] disorder, p.59: Features suggestive of schizophrenia, such as bizarre delusions, hallucinations, or thought disorder, may also be present. ... Diagnostic guidelines ... Hallucinations, thought disorder, or isolated catatonic phenomena may be present. ...
  • F20.0 Paranoid schizophrenia, p. 80: ... Thought disorder may be obvious in acute states, but if so it does not prevent the typical delusions or hallucinations from being described clearly. ...
  • F20.1 Hebephrenic schizophrenia, p. 81: ... In addition, disturbances of affect and volition, and thought disorder are usually prominent. Hallucinations and delusions may be present but are not usually prominent. ...

</ref> and a 2002 medical dictionary which generally defined thought disorders similarly to the psychiatric glossaries<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and used the word in other entries as the ICD-10 did.<ref>Template:Harvp

  • p. 470 psychosis: ... Symptoms include delusions, hallucinations, thought disorders, loss of affect, mania, and depression. ...
  • p. 499-500 schizophrenia: ... The main symptoms are various forms of delusions such as those of persecution (which are typical of paranoid schizophrenia); hallucinations, which are usually auditory (hearing voices), but which may also be visual or tactile; and thought disorder, leading to impaired concentration and thought processes. ...</ref>

A 2017 psychiatric text describing thought disorder as a "disorganization syndrome" in the context of schizophrenia:

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"Thought disorder" here refers to disorganization of the form of thought and not content. An older use of the term "thought disorder" included the phenomena of delusions and sometimes hallucinations, but this is confusing and ignores the clear differences in the relationships between symptoms that have become apparent over the past 30 years. Delusions and hallucinations should be identified as psychotic symptoms, and thought disorder should be taken to mean formal thought disorders or a disorder of verbal cognition.

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The text said that some clinicians use the term "formal thought disorder" broadly, referring to abnormalities in thought form with psychotic cognitive signs or symptoms,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and studies of cognition and subsyndromes in schizophrenia may refer to FTD as conceptual disorganization or disorganization factor.<ref name="Lewis2017-Thought Disorder" />

Some disagree:

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Unfortunately, "thought disorder" is often involved rather loosely to refer to both FTD and delusional content. For the sake of clarity, the unqualified use of the phrase "thought disorder" should be discarded from psychiatric communication. Even the designation "formal thought disorder" covers too wide a territory. It should always be made clear whether one is referring to derailment or loose associations, flight of ideas, or circumstantiality.{{#if: The Mental Status Examination, The Medical Basis of Psychiatry (2016)<ref>Template:Harvp</ref>

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Course, diagnosis, and prognosisEdit

It was believed that TD occurred only in schizophrenia, but later findings indicate that it may occur in other psychiatric conditions (including mania) and in people without mental illness.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Not all people with schizophrenia have a TD; the condition is not specific to the disease.<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics />

When defining thought-disorder subtypes and classifying them as positive or negative symptoms, Nancy Andreasen found<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics>Template:Harvp cited

</ref> that different subtypes of TD occur at different frequencies in those with mania, depression, and schizophrenia. People with mania have pressured speech as the most prominent symptom, and have rates of derailment, tangentiality, and incoherence as prominent as in those with schizophrenia. They are likelier to have pressured speech, distractibility, and circumstantiality.<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics /><ref name=BipolarIllness2016 />

People with schizophrenia have more negative TD, including poverty of speech and poverty of content of speech, but also have relatively high rates of some positive TD.<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics /> Derailment, loss of goal, poverty of content of speech, tangentiality and illogicality are particularly characteristic of schizophrenia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> People with depression have relatively-fewer TDs; the most prominent are poverty of speech, poverty of content of speech, and circumstantiality. Andreasen noted the diagnostic usefulness of dividing the symptoms into subtypes; negative TDs without full affective symptoms suggest schizophrenia.<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics /><ref name=BipolarIllness2016>Template:Cite book</ref>

She also cited the prognostic value of negative-positive-symptom divisions. In manic patients, most TDs resolve six months after evaluation; this suggests that TDs in mania, although as severe as in schizophrenia, tend to improve.<ref name="TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics" /> In people with schizophrenia, however, negative TDs remain after six months and sometimes worsen; positive TDs somewhat improve. A negative TD is a good predictor of some outcomes; patients with prominent negative TDs are worse in social functioning six months later.<ref name=TD2016-25.5-Diagnostics /> More prominent negative symptoms generally suggest a worse outcome; however, some people may do well, respond to medication, and have normal brain function. Positive symptoms vary similarly.<ref name=TD2016-25.6-Relationship>Template:Harvp</ref>

A prominent TD at illness onset suggests a worse prognosis, including:<ref name="Lewis2017-Thought Disorder" />Template:Div col

  • illness begins earlier
  • increased risk of hospitalization
  • decreased functional outcomes
  • increased disability rates
  • increased inappropriate social behaviorsTemplate:Div col end

TD which is unresponsive to treatment predicts a worse illness course.<ref name="Lewis2017-Thought Disorder" /> In schizophrenia, TD severity tends to be more stable than hallucinations and delusions. Prominent TDs are more unlikely to diminish in middle age, compared with positive symptoms.<ref name="Lewis2017-Thought Disorder" /> Less-severe TD may occur during the prodromal and residual periods of schizophrenia.<ref>Template:Harvp</ref> Treatment for thought disorder may include psychotherapy, such as cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), and psychotropic medications.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The DSM-5 includes delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thought process (formal thought disorder), and disorganized or abnormal motor behavior (including catatonia) as key symptoms of psychosis.<ref name="DSM-5" /> Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders such as schizoaffective disorder and schizophreniform disorder typically consist of prominent hallucinations, delusions and FTD; the latter presents as severely disorganized, bizarre, and catatonic behavior.<ref name="APA3" /><ref name="DSM-5" /> Psychotic disorders due to medical conditions and substance use typically consist of delusions and hallucinations.<ref name="DSM-5" /><ref name=":3" /> The rarer delusional disorder and shared psychotic disorder typically present with persistent delusions.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite book</ref> FTDs are commonly found in schizophrenia and mood disorders, with poverty of speech content more common in schizophrenia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Psychoses such as schizophrenia and bipolar mania are distinguishable from malingering, when an individual fakes illness for other gains, by clinical presentations; malingerers feign thought content with no irregularities in form such as derailment or looseness of association.<ref name=":4" /> Negative symptoms, including alogia, may be absent, and chronic thought disorder is typically distressing.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite book</ref>

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) whose diagnosis requires the onset of symptoms before three years of age can be distinguished from early-onset schizophrenia; schizophrenia under age 10 is extremely rare, and ASD patients do not display FTDs.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> However, it has been suggested that individuals with ASD 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.<ref name=":5" /> The illogical thinking was related to cognitive functioning and executive control; the loose associations were related to communication symptoms and parent reports of stress and anxiety.<ref name=":5">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Rorschach tests have been useful for assessing TD in disturbed patients.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Hart" /> A series of inkblots are shown, and patient responses are analyzed to determine disturbances of thought.<ref name="Hart" /> The nature of the assessment offers insight into the cognitive processes of another, and how they respond to equivocal stimuli.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Pn</ref> Hermann Rorschach developed this test to diagnose schizophrenia after realizing that people with schizophrenia gave drastically different interpretations of Klecksographie inkblots from others whose thought processes were considered normal,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and it has become one of the most widely used assessment tools for diagnosing TDs.<ref name="Hart" />

The Thought Disorder Index (TDI), also known as the Delta Index, was developed to help further determine the severity of TD in verbal responses.<ref name="Hart" /> TDI scores are primarily derived from verbally-expressed interpretations of the Rorschach test, but TDI can also be used with other verbal samples (including the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale).<ref name="Hart" /> TDI has a twenty-three-category scoring index; each category scores the level of severity on a scale from 0 to 1, with .25 being mild and 1.00 being most severe (0.25, 0.50, 0.75, 1.00).<ref name="Hart" />

Template:AnchorCriticismEdit

TD has been criticized as being based on circular or incoherent definitions.<ref name="Bentall">Bentall, R. (2003) Madness explained: Psychosis and Human Nature. London: Penguin Books Ltd. Template:ISBNTemplate:Pn</ref>Template:Request quotation Symptoms of TD are inferred from disordered speech, based on the assumption that disordered speech arises from disordered thought. Although TD is typically associated with psychosis, similar phenomena can appear in different disorders and leading to misdiagnosis.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

A criticism related to the separation of symptoms of schizophrenia into negative or positive symptoms, including TD, is that it oversimplifies the complexity of TD and its relationship to other positive symptoms.<ref name=":6" /> Factor analysis has found that negative symptoms tend to correlate with one another, but positive symptoms tend to separate into two groups.<ref name=":6">Template:Harvp cited

</ref> The three clusters became known as negative symptoms, psychotic symptoms, and disorganization symptoms.<ref name=TD2016-25.6-Relationship /> Alogia, a TD traditionally classified as a negative symptom, can be separated into two types: poverty of speech content (a disorganization symptom) and poverty of speech, response latency, and thought blocking (negative symptoms).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Positive-negative-symptom diametrics, however, may enable a more accurate characterization of schizophrenia.<ref>Template:Harvp "The two-syndrome concept as formulated by T. J. Crow was especially important in spurring research into the nature of negative symptoms ... but this does not diminish the creative efforts that led to these scales or importance of these scales for research. In fact, it was only through careful analysis of the structure of symptoms in these scales that a more accurate characterization of the phenomenology of schizophrenia was possible." </ref>

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