Stuff You Should Know - How Schizophrenia Works
Episode Date: August 23, 2011Up to 24 million people worldwide have schizophrenia. Despite the vast amounts of research, the disorder remains mysterious. In this episode, Josh and Chuck delve into the nature of schizophrenia, fro...m the history of the disorder to the latest research. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from HouseStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark with me as always is Charles W.
Chuckers, Chuck Tran, Chuck-a-Luck, Brian. How you doing? I'm great. I'm going to see Bob Dylan
tonight. People are going to be like, how many times is Bob Dylan playing on land? Have you ever
seen David Bowie? It's good. I have not. Yes, you are, Chuck. I know you're very excited.
I am. I've seen him a few times, but it's always good. Really? Yeah. Too short, though. He buzzes
through like 15 songs. He's out of there. Is he short? Oh, well, he's also short, but yeah.
Is he really? How is this kid? No, he's short. I guess those bell-bottomed long pants that he
wore in the 60s on his album made him look kind of tall. All right, so enough about Bob Dylan for
the second time. I'm not a big Dylan fan myself. Let's talk about schizophrenia instead. I was
looking for an intro for this, and there's plenty of stuff, but it's all pretty research-heavy.
AstraZeneca was marketing cerakwell off label and just settled. Let's see. What else? Jared
Loffner is being medicated against as well. The guy who shot Gabriel Giffords. Oh, okay. Really?
Yes. He's been diagnosed as schizophrenic. Interesting. Finally. And then there was a
homeless man in Los Angeles who was beaten to death by the police yesterday or today.
Awful. And all of this is kind of, I realized there wasn't any one thing that I was like,
well, here's the intro. But I realized all of it together gives a pretty good overview of
schizophrenia as it stands right now, which is it's misunderstood. It's heavily prescribed.
Underfunded. Research, that is. Yeah. And there's a lot of people out there who
aren't necessarily getting help who need it. Yeah. In fact, I got a stat if you want to go
ahead and go there. You got a bunch of stats you said for this, right? I do. If you want to talk
about people getting help and or needing help and not getting it, 6% of schizophrenics are homeless.
6% are in jail or prison. 10% in nursing homes, 25% with a family member, 28% are independently
living, 20% supervised housing. So and it makes sense, Chuck, too, that these make sense because
first of all, you have all of this crazy stuff going on to you. That's your reality.
So you're having trouble dealing with reality as it stands. Secondly, a lot of times schizophrenia
comes on during times when you learn how to hold down a job or take care of yourself or do whatever.
So you might never learn how to do this because you're dealing with your schizophrenia.
Here's the shocking one. Oh, okay. At any given moment, there are more people with
untreated, severe psychiatric illnesses living on the streets than there are receiving care.
Wow. They outweigh the people that are actually getting help. That's that is shocking, but not
surprising somehow. Agreed. Wow. So you said what was that last one? Severe psychiatric
illnesses. That's an umbrella term, obviously. Right. But schizophrenia falls in. Schizophrenia
falls in under that for sure. But prior to the beginning of the 20th century, it was pretty
much thought of as generalized illness. Like mental illness was mental illness and maybe there
is a symptom. Your symptoms were different, but really, you were mentally ill, which was a huge
step up from the spirit possession that had previously been ascribed to or probably millions
of years. Yeah. So it's a fairly recently classified mental illness. It wasn't until 1893
that a German psychiatrist named Emil Kreiplen classified schizophrenia as a mental illness.
And he misclassified it as a form of dementia, an early type of dementia. And then in 1911,
a Swiss psychiatrist named Eugen Blüter came up with the name schizophrenia. That's right,
Josh. And he got that word from the Greek words for split in mind, which contributes somewhat
to the misconception that it is a split personality disorder. But what he meant was
there's a disconnect with reality. Right. The mind splits from reality, which today we still,
that's how you still perceive schizophrenia. But rather than split, we use the word break.
There's a psychotic break. Yeah. And we should go ahead and just, since that is a common misconception,
it is entirely different than split personality disorder, which they call
disassociative identity disorder now. And if you know the move, the show United States of Terror,
have you seen that? No, I know what you're talking about there with Tony Colette. She is,
has split personality disorder on that show. And that's the one that you always see in the movies
where you have multiple personalities and they don't know about each other. And one dominates
the other. And then what all about Eve was about? I never saw that civil civil. Yeah, for sure.
But it's not schizophrenia. They have nothing to do with each other other than their both types
of mental illness. Right. And Hollywood is fascinated by them. That's right. So, yeah,
that's a pretty good example like of medicines is starting to get a hold of what schizophrenia is,
what mental illness is, you know, in general, and then the public at large still just being
completely undereducated about it. So let's educate people about it. Yeah, I want to say
too that this is like a lot of conditions and disorders that develop later in life. To me,
that's this one of the scariest things that can happen. Yeah, like you're cruising along at 27,
28 years old and you think like, you know, I'm all good and you can develop schizophrenia
like a boom and a matter of weeks sometimes. Yeah, it can either come on gradually or very
suddenly in an acute manner. And like you said later in life with men, schizophrenia usually
develops in the late teens or early 20s is when it starts. Or in women, it's the mid 20s or the
early 30s. So yeah, by the time by the time I was 30, I certainly didn't think I was going to become
mentally ill. No, you thought I know my demons. Yeah, write them down in a list. I can quit them
anytime I want. Yeah, that's what they are. They're self-imposed demons. Right. It wasn't
something that was beyond my control that happened to my mind. Right. And yeah, that's how
schizophrenia hits you later in life and it can happen all at once or gradually. And this is not
to scare the crap out of you if you're in your teens or 20s, because there's only about a 1%
chance that you'll get schizophrenia. It depends. If you're part of the general population,
there's a 1% chance. True. But as we'll see, there are risk factors that increase your chances of
having schizophrenia. And no, we're not trying to scare you. But I guess kind of the newest forms
of treatment or newest thoughts about treating schizophrenia is to make people aware of it
so that they will be able to recognize it early on. And apparently early treatment leads to
a better success rate. I think we'll talk about that across the board. But Chuck, there's two kinds
of symptoms of schizophrenia. And they're positive and negative. And it's not like positive symptom
means you hallucinate bunnies, where negative symptom means you hallucinate like a hell demon.
Instead, positive symptom is like an exaggeration of normal behavior. So like,
I see you, I hear things, but I don't see you with horns. Right. And I don't hear Kermit here
talking to me. Right. Right. So a positive symptom is an exaggerated behavior. Negative symptom is
the absence of normal behavior, like you lack affect or the ability to experience any emotion.
Or you basically are just generally apathetic, right? Yeah. And so it's positive symptoms and
negative symptoms. Yes. And certain negative symptoms are cognitive that deal a lot with
attention span and memory, lack of memory, inability to like plan anything or organize anything.
Right. And then another form of negative, I should say is called abolition. It's basically,
I think, Krepler, the guy who first classified schizophrenia, call it the annihilation of the
will, where you're just so withdrawn, you can't, you no longer engage in goal directed behavior
from brushing your teeth to paying your bills to doing anything. You're just totally withdrawn.
Wow. So that's, that's, that's not the form of schizophrenia you usually hear about, but apparently
it's fairly common. Really? Yeah. So to get diagnosed, Josh, you have to exhibit a certain
number of these symptoms over at least six months without stopping, right? Yeah. If you have,
is it schizo-freniform is like a shorter, it's schizophrenia, but it lasts less than six months.
Yeah, that's schizo-freniform. Right. Good point. But if you, according to the DSM, and we should
say like this is, you know, it's based on clinical observations or whatever, but this is the DSM
saying six months, it may be, you may have schizophrenia and you just haven't reached the
six months, you know, period yet, but you're still schizophrenic, but to be diagnosed by a
psychiatrist or a psychologist who's a member of the APA, you have to have X number of symptoms
for six months or more. Yeah. And they have to do that because it's like the same as the cops when
they say you can't file a missing persons report unless they've been gone for 24 hours. It's not,
it's not like that, but it's sort of like that. Now there's like a law, I think in Michigan called
Kaley's law or something that they're introducing where if you're a parent and you don't report
your kid missing after 24 hours, it's a felony. Oh, really? Yeah. What kind of parent wouldn't
do that? The parent that- Casey Anthony? Yeah, made the kid go away. Allegedly. Allegedly. None in general.
Schizophrenia apparently is how it's pronounced, can take a few forms. The one you've probably
heard about most is paranoid schizophrenia, which is when you have the full-on delusions and hallucinations
and then there's disorganized that is disorganized thinking. Your behavior is probably incoherent.
It's also called hebbafrenic. Really? Yeah. You probably don't exhibit a lot of emotion.
Yeah. Well, usually like there's a negative symptom coupled with disorganized behavior.
Okay. So it's almost like two separate things. I think you can be hebbafrenic without being
negative. Gotcha. There's catatonic. That means you move around and talk excessively. Yeah,
that was a surprise to me. I always thought, you know, catatonic state where you're just like-
Yeah, that's what I would think, too. But it also says they may become still and uncommunicative.
Right. So it can be one or the other. Yeah. But I guess it has to do with motion or movement or
lack of. Right. It's catatonic. Undifferentiated means that it's just sort of the umbrella term
for when you have a mix of symptoms and they don't want to classify you as one specific kind.
And then residual is if you have a history of schizophrenia but you have a long extended
period of time with no negative, I'm sorry, with negative but no positive symptoms,
they'll classify you as residual. Right. Which, you know, I guess that's
better than paranoid schizophrenia in a way. I don't think any form of schizophrenia is bad.
Right. That would be horrible. This is a horrible disease. It is. That's like the curbier
enthusiasm when Larry asked if someone had good Hodgkins from the party of five episodes
is what he was referencing when Charlie got sick. He had quote unquote good Hodgkins and they were
like they were so offended. There was no good Hodgkins. He's like, yeah, but one's better than
the other. Right. And they were just like, you're such a jerk. The never seen end like that.
Yeah, pretty much. And then we mentioned schizophrenia form, which is an abbreviated
version of schizophrenia. And then this one has to be just horrible. Schizo effective disorder.
It's any kind of schizophrenia coupled with the mood disorder like depression. Yeah.
Right. That's awful. So we should probably say there's delusions and there's hallucinations
mixed in together often with schizophrenic symptoms. And they're often confused, but a
delusion is a false belief and a hallucination is a false sensation like, Hey, I'm Jesus Christ.
That would be a delusion. Right. Or Hey, there's Jesus Christ on top of that subway car. That
would be a hallucination. Yeah. Right. And you can extend that to anything. It didn't have to be
Jesus or a subway car. You're right. But the there's just studying hallucinations and delusions
are really, really interesting in my opinion. Agreed. The most common hallucination is auditory
among schizophrenics. And the most common auditory hallucination is our voices. Yeah,
they hear voices that can come from anywhere from this Kermit the frog could start talking to me,
or it could come from thin air or it could come from the electrical outlet in the wall. Right.
And the voices say usually it's like one word, a couple of words. There's an implication of a word.
Sometimes it's indistinct mumbling on occasion, very rare occasions, will the voice like ramble
on coherently where the patient understands like long sentences. But that also may be commenting
on what the person's doing is very common. Yeah, usually it's not a voice that they recognize,
although that can happen as well. Yeah, right. And then sometimes there's more than one voice
and even more disconcertingly, the voices will argue about the patient. Yeah. Which
that's Wow. Well, those I mean, there's a guy on Marta that I see that and a lot of people
that you see that are walking down the street screaming out out loud, they there's probably
a pretty good chance that they might be paranoid schizophrenics. Yeah. And they are yelling at
the voice in their head. That reminds me of the stand up that I saw when I was a kid in the 80s.
This guy was like this comedian said he was walking down the street and he walked past
this guy was talking to himself and he's just mumbling sounded so angry and the comedian goes
and I thought, man, that guy is really crazy. He's talking to himself. And then I thought,
wait, who am I talking to? Yeah, it's a good point. Yeah, I talk to myself all day long.
I have arguments in my head. Yeah. But of course, it's not the same thing. No.
No, you don't have two voices arguing over what you're doing at that moment and what's best for
you or whether you should hurt somebody or hurt yourself. Not making light of that. And the reason
that a percentage of frightening percentage of schizophrenics kill themselves is a lot of times
because the voice in their head may command them to do so. Right. There's such a thing as
commanding hallucinations, which is sometimes they could be suggestive. Like maybe we should go
outside for a while or they could be like go outside. Yeah, you know, and it's not always
scary. Like they point out sometimes it's a hey, you need to shave again, right? And you'll go
shave again. Yeah, it can be innocuous, but it can it can lead to violence. Yeah. Or it can urge
violence. Apparently the vast majority of people who suffer dangerous command hallucinations are
able to suppress them. Right. But it's a struggle. And you know, this is going on in this person's
head. Yeah. And rarely. And I wondered about this too before I got to that point in the article
that you sent me. Rarely do you hear like really great things like you're doing great today and
you should go you look at that flower and smell it. You know, it's interesting that it usually takes
a dark turn. Yes, it is. And they don't know why. No, they don't. The war on drugs impacts
everyone whether or not you take drugs. America's public enemy number one is drug abuse. This
podcast is going to show you the truth behind the war on drugs. They told me that I would be charged
for conspiracy to distribute 2200 pounds of marijuana. Yeah, and they can do that without
any drugs on the table without any drugs. Of course, yes, they can do that. And I'm the prime
example. The war on drugs is the excuse our government uses to get away with absolutely
insane stuff. Stuff that will piss you off. The property is guilty. Exactly. And it starts
as guilty. It starts as guilty. Cops. Are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging?
They just have way better names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being
robbed. They call civil acid.
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or wherever you find your favorite shows. There's also hallucinations of touch,
haptic hallucinations, which sound pretty awful. Things are crawling on you. Things are inside of
you trying to get out. Your bowels are shriveling. You're being jolted by electricity is a very
common one. And then delusions obviously are of any false belief. There's some that you are
Jesus Christ. That's a delusion, right? But there was one subcategory that caught my attention
that I wasn't aware of. It's called delusion of reference. Yeah, tell me about that. Well,
it's basically like every single thing that goes on in life is full of meaning, right?
So like in this Brown University sheet I sent you, there's a waiter leaving a
chrome on the table that's purposeful. It's an insult to the patient. The bus boy or the
waiter did that on purpose as an insult. Or the street lights coming on all of a sudden
is a signal for everybody to swarm on you and finally take you away or kill you or whatever.
Right. Like everything in life has meaning and it's making you, it's fueling this paranoia.
Your mind is turning against you. It's pretty awful. Yeah. Have we said it's awful? Yeah.
Okay. Yes, it is quite awful. But people live with this. Yeah. I mean, we painted a dark picture
because it is a dark disorder, but the majority of people in fact stat time after 10 years,
if you want to know after 10 years of diagnosis with schizophrenia, 25% completely recover,
25% are much improved and relatively independent and 25% are improved, but require a pretty
extensive support network. So that 75% of people after diagnosis after a decade are dealing with
it fairly well. Yeah, it's very hopeful. That's not bad. 15% are unimproved and 10% unfortunately
are dead probably by suicide. Yeah. Well, 10% at least of schizophrenics commit suicide, which is
incredibly high because in the general population of the United States, 0.01% of people commit
suicide. So 10% to 0.01%. Yeah. And that's people who are successful. They think it could be,
attempts could be as high as 55% people that try to kill themselves. Yeah. Just to, I mean,
imagine sometimes the voices say to do it and sometimes it's just a fine piece.
Yeah, I was wondering what the breakdown between those two is as well. And then violence is often
attendant with schizophrenics, at least in the public mind, right? Yeah, but it's not quite
true. You're dangerous. Yeah. Apparently studies have shown, and I remember reading about this
when we talked about latent inhibition, that if you are typically violent when these,
when the symptoms set in your early 20s or whatever, you're going to possibly be a violent
schizophrenic. If you're not a very violent person, it's just not part of your personality
before the symptoms set in, then you're not going to be a violent schizophrenic.
Unless you abuse drugs or alcohol, which apparently vastly increases the chances that
you may be a violent schizophrenic. Yeah. And even then, I think the violence is generally either
self-inflicted or it takes place inside the home, like against your family, which is not good. But
point is, if you're walking down the street and sadly you see the homeless man screaming out loud,
you don't necessarily need to be afraid that he's about to, you know, attack you in a violent
manner. Right. That's probably not going to happen. No. Chuck, let's say you do want to talk to that
schizophrenic homeless man over there, but you don't want to make things worse
for him. Right. But you don't want to ignore him. He's another human being. The National
Institutes of Mental Health have suggestions, I guess, for talking to schizophrenics and specifically
with their families who have to deal with delusions and hallucinations all the time,
specifically delusions. Apparently, you don't contest what they're saying. Yeah,
you don't want to say you're not Jesus Christ. What are you talking about? Yeah, you don't
say that. No. You say, I respect your right to believe different things, and I hope you'll
respect my right to believe different things, but I politely disagree. Yeah. And what you also
don't want to do is agree and say, I know, honey, you are Jesus Christ. Right. You're okay, you're
Jesus, and it's fine. Yes. And a lot of people probably take that tack in the family. Well,
yeah. I mean, at the very least, because it's just easier. After a while, it's like, yes, yes,
or you get so frustrated, you're like, no, you're not, and you want to shake the person. Right.
But yeah, apparently, and I wonder how hard it is to say, well, I respectfully disagree with you.
Yeah, I bet it's hard. You know, and if it does go over as well as it seems like it suggested it
should. Right. You know, all right, Josh, I think this was really interesting, the recovery in the
third world part. Yeah. Apparently, the World Health Organization did a study in the 1960s,
and found that the recovery rate for schizophrenia in developing nations is higher by a full third
than it is in the industrialized world. And then they did a follow up study even
to correct possible selection biases, and they confirmed the original finding. And I thought
that was really interesting. And they, there's a lot of hypotheses, but one of them is that
either might not be a stigma like in the industrialized world, and they're just more readily
accepted. And the other is that they might be able to have a job that they can do right successfully.
And here in the West, farming or digging, you know, digging the trench for the farm or whatever.
Right. Here in the West, we're very competitive. Yeah, it's hard to get a job that a schizophrenic
can maybe successfully complete. Right. And I mean, the rest of us are paranoid enough as it is
about losing our jobs. If you are clinically paranoid schizophrenic, then it's probably going
to be very difficult to keep your job. True. Or do it in a way that will help you keep your job.
That's very true. But Josh, there have been some successful stories of people that are
reflected with schizophrenia. Well, some, some more successful than some. Sid Barrett was
successful, but I don't know if you call him a success story in depth in a mental institution
or the rest of his life. Yeah. Sid Barrett, founding member of Pink Floyd,
schizophrenic, and they believe that massive amounts of drugs that he used made it worse.
Way worse. John Nash. He is, he is the crazy diamond. Yeah. Shine on you crazy diamond.
Yeah. I love that song. That's a good one. All four parts of it, right? And then like part,
I think up to part four. Is it? Yeah. Yeah. John Nash. Yeah. From the movie A Beautiful Mind,
the Ron Howard film with Russell Crowe as John Nash, the Nobel winner. The one who helped
figure out that cable companies would do better if they cooperated with one another.
That's right. And that movie did a lot for putting this on the map in a compassionate way, you know.
And Jack Kerouac, did you know that one? That one's debatable. Okay. He was in the Navy and they
discharged him honorably after, I think like a little less than a year. And the report,
they said he had schizoid tendencies. Oh yeah. But other people have said that he faked that
stuff to get out of the Navy and just wanted to not take orders and drink himself to death,
which is what he did. And pop benes. Do you know how he died? No. He woke up and with just like
coughing blood and bleeding from his mouth and basically was like, I got to go to the hospital,
took him to the hospital and he was, his liver was so shot that his blood wouldn't clot and they
just were giving him transfusion one after the other. And he just basically bled to death.
Holy cow. From drinking. Holy cow. And he was drinking at the time. He was drinking whiskey and
like whiskey and malt liquor when he started, blood started coming out of his mouth.
I wonder how that tastes. Would you shake or stir that? And I don't think he mixed them. I
think it was like whiskey with a beer bag. And it garnished with a drop of blood.
So kids, there's a lesson for you. There is one more person who is indisputably schizophrenic
or was his name is Wesley Willis. Who's that? He is a musician who had such songs as well really
the only title I can say is rock and roll McDonald's. I don't, I've never heard of him. You,
you have had to have heard of Wesley Willis. Really? Okay. Let me play you a little Wesley
Willis right here. All right. McDonald's is a place to rock. It is a restaurant where they buy
food to eat. It is a good place to listen to the music. People flock here to get down to the rock
music. So Chuck, that's Wesley Willis. Oh, okay. Okay. And he was very much schizophrenic. He wrote
about it a lot. He talked about it in a lot of his songs. And he said he'd just be going along,
having a nice time riding the bus. Yeah. I believe he lived in Chicago. And then all of a sudden his
hell demons would take him on one of his torture hell rides, which meant he was going on a little
bit of an exacerbation of his schizophrenia symptoms. Wow. But he's a great, great guy,
great music, very prolific. And if you liked that, you should go watch Daddy Rock and Roll.
It was a documentary about it. Yeah. It's really good. I'll check that out. Yeah. Lionel Aldridge
is the last name on our list. And he was a Green Bay Packer. And he was homeless, unfortunately,
after he was diagnosed for a while. And then later was able to climb out from that wreckage and go
around and talk about mental illness. And he was playing in the 60s, the 70s? I think it was late
60s or 70s. Yeah. So think about it, man. That's a big deal to go around and talk publicly about
mental illness at that time. And it still is now. But I mean, like back then, that's,
hats off to him. Yeah. He was the guy that I included in the presentation that you did by
yourself. Oh, okay. That you're like, he was this guy. Yeah. All right. I understand now. Yeah. It's
all coming together. So Chuck, what causes this? Well, it seems like there are environmental factors
and there are genetic factors. They've isolated what they believe are some genes, the DISC1,
the Disbinden, the Neurogulin, and the G72 genes. Okay. And they think there might be up to a dozen
more genes that could impact this. Okay. So the basis of that is that they can't just look at your
genes and say you're going to be schizophrenic. Right. It's possible that it's because we just
haven't isolated all the genes and don't know the right combination yet. Right. Or it's possible
that it's from other causes. One of which, one of the theories that's out there right now,
is that it's the result of an in-utero exposure to either a flu or the dread toxoplasmosis.
Remember toxoplasmosis? I do. That hijacks rat's brains that's found in cat urine? That's why
if you have a cat and you're pregnant, you don't be clean enough of that litter box. Right. And
they think that one of the reasons, I guess one of the pieces of evidence that supports this is
called the birth month effect. And the birth month effect is if you were born in winter months or
early spring months, you are at a higher risk for becoming schizophrenic later in life. And they
think that those are flu months. Yeah. And another aspect of it is apparently the brains of schizophrenics
show inflamed white blood cells, which is a sign of an infection. And they think that possibly all
of us are carrying around a retrovirus encoded in our genes that lies dormant, like MS, that under
the right circumstances, like early exposure to an infection, can trigger its release or trigger
its activation. And it takes 18 to 20 to 30 years to come on. Now you see why people that are pregnant
are worried a lot. It's amazing that like we've gotten anywhere. I know. So what else? Well,
they did do have some new findings. I got this today from the internet. They have a new South
Wales study from Thomas Weikert. He has identified the brain mechanism that derails decision making
in people. So basically the part of the brain is called the ventral stratium. I'm sorry,
striatum. And it lights up. You know, they put people in the MRI. It lights up when in response
to rewards and healthy people. And it's linked to your decision making, but completely unresponsive
amongst schizophrenics. So they don't know the difference between expected and unexpected
rewards. And so they don't have the opportunity to make a good decision to begin with. And that,
you know, it's a nice finding. It doesn't get us any closer. Well, maybe it does. You never know.
They say with proper funding that they predicted 2013, they could have a cure for this.
Well, yeah, but they don't get proper funding. No, but they're, they're looking into stem cells,
right? They're looking into figuring out if it is an infection. And if so,
like combating that. And we've also long had antipsychotics. One of the things strangely
enough that helped develop antipsychotics or better antipsychotics is PCP. Yeah,
apparently researchers figured out that phenylsiclidine or fensiclidine, PCP, the drug,
angel dust produced such similar symptoms to schizophrenia that they started investigating
it and found that it had to do with the neurotransmitter glutamate, right? Right. And dopamine,
right? Yes. Well, it has to do with both. But the emphasis before on antipsychotics was strictly
dopamine. Okay. And all it, all it did was keep dopamine in the synapses longer by blocking its
reuptake by receptors. That's what antipsychotics do. And then in the 80s, after the PCP stuff,
they figured out that there was glutamate was involved. They came up with atypical
antipsychotics. And these focus somewhat on dopamine, but more on things like glutamate
and its reuptake. And these things have produced better results with fewer side effects.
So they're, they're figuring out how to treat it. Right. The problem is, is there's all sorts of
side effects, even, even with atypical antipsychotics, like weight gain, drowsiness, sluggishness,
nervousness, muscle spasms, bulging eyes, apparently is one. Oh, really? And I guess most
of the stuff can be treated by lowering the dosage, but they're bothersome enough that a lot of people
just go off their meds. Right. And, you know, that doesn't help. ECT, electroconvulsive therapies,
another thing that they still do. It's not something a relic from the 50s. Yes. It's
changed a lot and how they do it. And they're not sure still how it exactly works. They stopped
using car batteries. The war on drugs impacts everyone, whether or not you take drugs.
America's public enemy number one is drug abuse. This podcast is going to show you the truth behind
the war on drugs. They told me that I would be charged for conspiracy to distribute 2,200 pounds
a month. Yeah, and they can do that without any drugs on the table. Without any drugs, of course,
yes, they can do that. And I'm the prime example of that. The war on drugs is the excuse our
government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff. Step out of piss y'all. The property is
guilty. Exactly. And it starts as guilty. It starts as guilty. The cops, are they just like
looting? Are they just like pillaging? They just have way better names for what they call, like,
what we would call a jack move or being robbed. They call civil acid.
Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast.
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But about 100,000 Americans each year still receive ECT. So that is an option and obviously
the group therapy and family therapy help just the dealing with it aspect of the family.
Yes. So we encourage you to seek help soon as possible.
Yeah. And apparently families can help in very little ways. They're encouraged to
set small goals. Apparently, especially if you have lost your drive or your will as a result of
your schizophrenia or you're disorganized, it can just be compounded by all the, you know,
like when your life is disorganized, it seems just completely unwieldy.
Yeah. Like where do I start? Right. Now, if that's a symptom of your schizophrenia,
it's just that much worse. So if you can help a schizophrenic get back on track by setting
small goals and building up their confidence again, apparently that has a measurable effect
in their recovery. Sure. And then one of the leading edges of schizophrenia treatment right now
is based on this thing called the prodrome, which is the period between the onset of symptoms
where you think, maybe I am Jesus Christ and the time when that seems like your reality.
So it's this point where you're starting to have the ideas, but they still seem bizarre or weird
or why am I having these ideas? So if you apparently seek out treatment for schizophrenia
when you start to have these ideas in the prodrome, the success rate of treatment is
through the roof. Like, yes, this British doctor in the late 80s set up shop in these two towns
outside of London, and he's set to work finding every potential early case of schizophrenia
he could. And he started treating people with therapy and low doses of antipsychotics. And in
four years, those two towns had a tenth of the prevalence of schizophrenia of the rest of the
country. Wow. Yeah. So apparently, like this prodrome research, there's like clinics that are
opening up and like entire like departments in universities are dedicated to this prodrome
period where you can be like, come come back. This is reality. Right. Wow. Yeah. And they're
successful or they have been so far. Well, Josh, I got one more stat. If you live in a city of three
million people, then over 21,000 people in your city are suffering from schizophrenia. So well,
keep that in mind. Yes. Don't make fun of people. Don't obviously get scared or violent
in a reactive way. I don't know that I'm going to say like you should go over and talk to them
like you might want to just be compassionate and hopefully they're getting help. You know what I'm
saying? Yes. Go to schizophrenia.com. You can find all kinds of good information. And if you hadn't
already checked out Wesley Willis, check them out. He was a great guy. Check out the Daddy of
Rock and Roll. And also, I would say in addition to how schizophrenia works, required reading for
this one is an article called Which Way Madness Lies by Rachel Aviv. It was in the December 2010
issue of Harper's. And I have a link. I'll like I'll tweet it. I'll tweet the link with that.
That sounds great. If you want more about schizophrenia, there's plenty of it. There's
an article and then some on the site just type schizophrenia, which again means split mind.
That's right. Into the search bar at howstuffworks.com. And that brings up what? Check listener now.
Yes, Josh, specifically corrections. We have done it a long time.
Oh, wow. I forgot about those. Yeah. Well, we'll correct ourselves on Facebook and stuff, but
they mount it up. So we want to go for it. Okay. How wildfires work? Oh, man, I don't have this
guy's name. A couple of people sent this in. The flashpoint of paper is not Fahrenheit 451.
I said books. The flashpoint of books is not Fahrenheit 451. It is Fahrenheit 851 Celsius
450. And Ray Bradbury apparently changed the title because Fahrenheit 451 sounds a lot better
than Celsius 450 apparently. What was 481? No, Celsius 450 is the flashpoint or Fahrenheit
851. Oh, 851. That counts as good as 451, I think. Yeah. Okay. But I assume that as well.
Man, I wish I had his name. You know who you are. And it was very nice correction. Those are the
ones we like to read. Then we got a correction on who was the first murderer. Apparently,
David says, and he even sent in a copy of 1491 by Charles Mann. What? Where?
What? He sent an email. No, not a not a. He sent a scanned copy of the page. Okay. In 1491,
he says, Charles Mann says, although Billington was in fact hanged, at least two other Europeans
were executed before him. One was convicted for the much more interesting offense of killing his
pregnant wife and eating her. So how about that? He says that was on page 55 of 1491. Yeah. There
it is. That is crazy. Okay. But still, Billington is a very noteworthy figure, obviously,
sees a whole chapter on him. Sure. And then we got some, oh, first of all, some people wrote in
about wildfires in Georgia when I said, oh, Georgia didn't have wildfires. South Georgia does. And
there's actually one going on right now in the Okefenokee. So I misspoke for sure, because I was
just talking about the North Georgia Mountains, which are very lush and green, but South Georgia
can get quite dry. And there are wildfires in Georgia. I did not know that. That is true. And
then finally, we got an email from an actual Hindu named Kush kush. And Kush says, you guys
missed a few things. Hinduism typically, I'm sorry, technically, only has one God, not a Pantheon.
It's complicated to explain, especially in the non-Hindus, but the general idea is there is
one universal soul or God that encompasses everything called the Brahman. Okay. I've heard
of that. Not the Broham. And every living thing has a part of that in us called the Atman. The
different gods are just different forms of the one Brahman. Also, you didn't properly explain the
laws of karma. The law of karma has three parts in Hinduism. One, the performer of an action will
get the result. Two, the result of the action will come right at the right time. And three, good
actions bring good results, bad actions bring bad results. And fourth, the gods are technically
subject to karma if you also expand the definition of karma to include the law of karma. But he says
it was a good podcast overall. You guys really hit it on the head, except for these few points.
You did not hit it on the head for that. Well, just for that one part. And finally,
he pointed out, and a few other people pointed out that I was wrong in correcting you with
Jainism. Yeah, Jainism. Thank you. But I'm going to play you something right now. Jainism. Okay.
That was from dictionary.com. Well, that voice is obviously wrong. Maybe so. This is from Merriam
Webster. If it's the same voice, it doesn't count twice. Jainism. Wow. Did you hear that?
That's a different voice. Did that one come through, Matt? Okay. And then finally, this is
Google definitions. And this is my favorite of all, actually. I don't like where this is going.
Jainism. Wow. So I don't know, because I had like three other people said, no, man. Three other
robots? No, three other real people said, no, it's Jainism. And then I went on YouTube and people
said Jainism. So I don't know. Well, I like that it's both. We're both right. Yes. Or we're both
wrong. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe it's Jainism. Well, we love corrections so much that I managed to forget
that we are corrected a lot, or we used to read them. I never forget that we're corrected. Right.
But let's do this again soon. Agreed. Go through all 350 episodes. Find everything you can. That's
wrong with them. And then let us know. Okay. Okay. Or you can just correct the most recent ones,
whatever we got wrong in this one, which I'm sure is substantial. You can go on Facebook,
if you want. You can tweet to us, syskpodcast, or you can send us a plain old fashioned email
at stuffpodcast at howstuffworks.com.
Be sure to check out our new video podcast, Stuff from the Future. Join howstuffworks staff as we
explore the most promising and perplexing possibilities of tomorrow. Brought to you by the
reinvented 2012 Camry. It's ready. Are you? The war on drugs is the excuse our government uses
to get away with absolutely insane stuff. Stuff that'll piss you off. The cops,
are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging? They just have way better
names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being robbed. They call civil
acid. Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you get your podcast. Where were you in 92? Bouncing your butt to Sir Mixalot? Wondering if
you like Billy Ray Cyrus could pull off a moment. Now iHeart has a podcast all about it. I'm Jason
Launfier, and on my new show, Where Were You in 92, we take a ride through the major hits,
one hit wonders, and shocking scandals that shaped the wildest 12 months in music history.
You know, the president came after me, everybody, Time Warner was madness.
Music was magic, and I had completely burned that to the ground. I realized I'm the forbidden fruit.
So listen and follow Where Were You in 92 on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.