Abstract

Disturbances in body experience are described as key schizophrenia symptoms and early disease predictors. In case studies, different disorders relating to body experience are presented, but only a few empirical studies have aimed to distinguish the characteristics of body experience in schizophrenia, and these have been selected arbitrarily and without reference to cohesive theoretical model. To integrate this fragmentary approach, we propose a body self (BS) model, composed of: functions; representations (e.g., body image); and sense of body identity. The aim of the study was to determine whether the BS differentiates schizophrenic patients from healthy controls, and to investigate the relations between aspects of BS and a history of illness and clinical characteristics. The Body Self Questionnaire and the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale were administered to 63 schizophrenic patients and 63 healthy subjects. The difference was found in the functions of the body-self (perceiving, interpreting, and regulating body experience), in the sense of body identity, and in one of three aspects of body image explored (e.g., acceptance of biological sex). Disturbances in BS were related to positive symptoms and to the number of hospitalizations for other diseases. Together, the results demonstrate that schizophrenia is more body experience than body image disorder, since the negative emotional attitude towards the body and acceptance of fitness were not distinctive for schizophrenia. The link between the disturbances in BS and the number of nonpsychiatric hospitalizations suggests that misinterpretation of body experiences in schizophrenia can promote a search for medical attention.

Highlights

  • The classic publications of Bleuler (1950) and Kraepelin (1916) describe numerous disorders relating to body experience as key symptoms of schizophrenia

  • The analysis showed that the results for each Body Self Questionnaire (BSQ) subscale measuring functions of the body self and the sense of body identity were significantly higher in schizophrenic patients who more often than controls, experienced both increased and decreased sensitivity to external stimuli; the difference is smaller for lowered thresholds

  • The results revealed significant differences in each BS function and sense of body identity, whereas differences in representations were insignificant, with the exception of acceptance of biological sex.The basic function of the BS is the perception of stimuli, and schizophrenic patients indicated that they suffered from more disturbances than controls in terms of both lowered and heightened thresholds of sensation

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Summary

Introduction

The classic publications of Bleuler (1950) and Kraepelin (1916) describe numerous disorders relating to body experience as key symptoms of schizophrenia. Such symptoms used to be categorized as early disease predictors experienced by 50 % to 70 % (Ferri et al 2014; Stanghellini et al 2012). Disturbances of body experience in schizophrenia constitute a wide range of phenomena for which no common theoretical denominator has yet been found. This state of knowledge is reflected in the fragmented empirical studies Curr Psychol (2018) 37:390–400 a single or a few arbitrarily selected aspects) using different assessment methods (self-report measures, experiments, etc.).

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