Title: Mental Disorders and Neurological Disorders
1Mental Disorders and Neurological Disorders
2Schizophrenia
- Most common psychosis afflicts 1 of population
- Positive and negative symptoms
- Positive Symptoms not present in normals
- Thought disorders disorganized thinking
- Hallucinations Auditory, voices talking
- Delusions beliefs contrary to fact
3Schizophrenia
- Negative symptoms Absence of normal behaviors
- Flattened affect
- Poverty of speech
- Lack of initiative
- Inability to experience pleasure
4Five Types of Schizophrenia
- Subtype Symptoms
- Disorganized Disorganized speech, disorganized
behavior, or inappropriate emotion - Catatonic Extreme movement symptoms ranging from
excessive motor activity to posturing
(immobility for long periods) - Paranoid Organized cognition and emotion, but
with hallucinations and delusions that are
usually concerned with persecution - Undifferentiated Mixed-bag categorysymptoms fit
the criteria of more than one of the above
three types or none of them - Residual There has been a past schizophrenic
episode, but presently only some negative
symptoms and no positive symptoms
(hallucinations and delusions)
5Type I and Type II
- Another distinction is between Type I and Type
II schizophrenia - Type I schizophrenia is characterized by
positive symptoms - Type II schizophrenia is characterized by
negative symptoms - Type I is more acute, as the person functioned
normally before the disorder strikes and has a
better chance of recovery because Type I can
usually be alleviated with drugs, whereas Type II
tends to stem from more permanent brain
abnormalities
6Schizophrenia
- Heritability
- Twin studies
- Adoption studies
- Children of schizo. Have increased chance of
becoming schizo. independent of whether they
have been raised by biological parents
7SchizophreniaKety et al., 1958
8Developmental Causes
- One hypothesis involves Neural Developmental
Abnormalities - Genes plus abnormalities in prenatal or neonatal
developmental impair brain development and lead
to schizophrenia - linked to poor nutrition in pregnancy, premature
birth or low birth weight, delivery complications - Rh-negative mother with Rh-positive baby has
twice the rate of schizophrenia for second and
later born boys - people born in winter have 5-8 higher rate
- may be due to increased likelihood of viral
infection and fever in mother (1.5 slows
development of fetal neurons)
9Neurodevelopmental Hypothesis cont.
- Ventricles larger, smaller prefrontal/temporal
cortex, hippocampus - fewer than normal synapses in prefrontal cortex
- cell bodies smaller in hippocampus and prefrontal
cortex - Brain abnormalities found in young patients are
no greater in older patients - but cells may shrink, rather than die, with age
- slow maturation of prefrontal cortex explains
onset after 20 - Plausible hypothesis but more research is needed
10Schizophrenia Dopamine
- Dopamine (DA) hypothesis
- Positive symptoms may be related to over-activity
of DA - DA agonists (amphetamine, cocaine) can produce
schizo-like symptoms hallucinations, delusions,
thought disorders - Drugs that block DA have anti-psychotic efficacy
- best if used early, some fully recover but about
25 do not benefit from drugs
11Schizophrenia
12Dopamine Hypothesis cont.
- But blocking dopamine receptors doesnt explain
behavior change weeks later - General dopamine levels are approximately normal
- but patients have higher number of D2 receptors
occupied - and more D2 receptor activation in the prefrontal
cortex is related to more cognitive impairment
13Glutamate Hypothesis
- An important problem is deficient glutamate
activity in glutamate synapses, especially the
prefrontal cortex - has same effect as increase in dopamine
- dopamine inhibits glutamate and glutamate
stimulates neurons that inhibit dopamine release - Persons with schizophrenia release lower amounts
of glutamate in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus - also have lower number than normal glutamate
receptors
14Glutamate Hypothesis cont.
- Phencyclidine (PCP) decreases stimulation of
glutamate- type NMDA receptors and produces both
positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia - impairs functioning of prefrontal cortex
- induces long-lasting relapse in persons with
schizophrenia - Glycine activates cotransmitter site on NMDA
glutamate receptors that increases the
effectiveness of glutamate - also increases the effectiveness of other
anti-psychotic drugs
15Antipsychotic Drugs
- Block postsynaptic dopamine receptors
- benefits result from effects on the
mesolimbocortical system, neurons that project
from the midbrain tegmentum to the limbic system - however, drugs also block dopamine synapses in
other locations, e.g., basal ganglia, and produce
tardive dyskinesia a disorder of tremors and
involuntary movements - tardive dyskinesia can last for years after drugs
are no longer used
16Antipsychotic Drugs cont.
- Atypical antipsychotics, e.g., clozapine, blocks
D4 receptors but not D2 - does not result in tardive dyskinesia
- beneficial for both positive and negative
symptoms - but decreases white blood cells leaving person
vulnerable to infections
17Neurological Disorders
- Overview
- Tumors
- Seizures
- Cerebrovascular accidents
- Alzheimers Disease
18TumorsCells whose growth is uncontrolled and
which serve no useful purpose
19Tumors
- Malignant Infiltration
- Benign Distinct border
- Tumors do not arise from neurons
- Gliomas From glia Dangerous, fast growing
- Meningioma Cells of meninges
- Pituitary adenoma Hormone secreting cells of
pituitary - Angioma Cells of blood vessels
20Seizures
- Sudden excessive activity of cerebral neurons
- Partial seizure Definite limited focus or source
of irritation - Generalized seizure Widespread
- Grand Mal includes motor system convulsions
- Auras may precede indicating locus of origin
21Seizures
- Grand Mal Seizure
- Tonic phase arms rigid
- Clonic phase muscles trembling/jerking
- Stuporous sleep
22Seizures
- Petite mal (absences)
- Stare off into space
- Causes of seizures
- Tissue scaring
- Strokes
- High fever
- Treatment
- Anticonvulsants
- Surgery
23EpilepsyRemoving stones from the brain?
Jan Sanders van Hemessen (about 1575)
24Possible causes?
Normal
- Axonal sprouting auto stimulation of network of
neurons - Loss of inhibitory K channels and currents
- Bernard et al., 2004
Sprouted
Loss of inhibition
25Cerebrovascular accidents Strokes
- Hemorrhages
- Obstruction (thrombus)
- Produce permanent brain damage
- Therapies
- Clot-busting drugs
- NMDA (glutamate) receptor blockers
26Alzheimers Disease
27Former President Ronald Regan had Alzheimers
Disease
28Alzheimers Disease
- Senile dementia of the Alzheimers type
- Symptoms
- Progressive loss of memory
- Confusion
- Depression
- Restlessness
- Delusions
- Eating disturbances
- Sleep disturbances
29Alzheimers Disease
- Diagnosis confirmed post-mortem
- Tangles and ?-amyloid plaques
30Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) may be cleaved
into toxic fragments when cut at Ăź and ? sites
31AĂź1-42 protein fragments are exported from cell
and aggregate into tangles and plaques
32Alzheimers Disease
- Possible causes
- Heredity 21st chromosome contains gene that
produces Amyloid precursor protein (APP) But
most forms are not hereditary - Aluminum deposits but Al found in non-damaged
brain areas - Excessive alcohol Like Korsakoffs Disease
(memory loss) ? but different brain areas
damaged
33Alzheimers Disease
- Possible causes
- Traumatic injury People with closed head injury
have many ?-amyloid plaques. Contributor? - Inflammatory disease An immune system reaction?
- People taking anti-inflammatory drugs have low
rate of ALZ - Indomethacin enhances cognition in ALZ patients
(Rogers et al.)