Title: Schizophrenia
1Schizophrenia
2A bit of history
- Hideyo Noguchi, 1911 Syphillis (delusions,
grandiosity, impulsivity, altered thought
structure) is due to bacterium. - Emil Kraeplin, 1919 dementia praecox (paranoia,
grandiose delusions, auditory hallucinations,
abnormal emotional reg., bizarre thoughts)partly
genetic - Eugen Bleuler, 1911 key is dissociative
thinking also delusions, hallucinations,
affective disturbance, autism.
3Schizophrenia actually refers to a group of
disorders. There is not one essential symptom
that must be present for a diagnosis. Instead,
patients experience different combinations of the
main symptoms of schizophrenia.
4Schizophrenia actually refers to a group of
disorders. There is not one essential symptom
that must be present for a diagnosis. Instead,
patients experience different combinations of the
main symptoms of schizophrenia.
What is schizophrenia?
5Two categories of symptoms in schizophrenia
- Positive symptoms
- Negative symptoms
6Positive Symptoms
- Distortions or excesses of normal functioning
(e.g., delusions, hallucinations, disorganized
speech/thought disturbances, motor disturbances) - Positive symptoms are generally more responsive
to treatment than negative symptoms
7Delusions
- False beliefs that are firmly and consistently
held despite disconfirming evidence,culture or
logic. - Individuals with mania or delusional depression
may also experience delusions. However, the
delusions of patients with schizophrenia are
often more bizarre (highly implausible).
8Types of delusions
- Delusions of persecution belief that one is the
target of others mistreatment, evil plots,
and/or murderous intent (most common) - Delusions of reference belief that all
happenings revolve around oneself, and/or one is
always the center of attention
9Types of delusions
- Delusions of grandeur belief that one is a
famous or powerful person from the past or
present - Delusions of control belief that some external
force is trying to take control of ones thoughts
(thought insertion), body, or behavior
10Example of delusions of controlThought
insertion Believing that thoughts that are not
your own have been placed in your mind by an
external sourceA 29-year-old housewife said, I
look out of the window and I think the garden
looks nice and the grass looks cool, but the
thoughts of Eamonn Andrews come into my mind.
There are no other thoughts there, only his He
treats my mind like a screen and flashes his
thoughts on it like you flash a picture.
11Types of delusions
- Thought broadcasting belief that ones thoughts
are being broadcast or transmitted to others - Thought withdrawal belief that ones thoughts
are being removed from ones mind
12Hallucinations
- Sensory experiences in the absence of any
stimulation from the environment - Any sensory modality may be involved auditory
(hearing) visual (seeing) olfactory (smelling)
tactile (feeling) gustatory (tasting) - Auditory hallucinations are most common
13Common auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia
- Hearing own thoughts spoken by another voice
- Hearing voices that are arguing
- Hearing voices commenting on ones own behavior
14Disorganized Speech / Thought Disturbances
- Problems in organizing ideas and speaking so that
a listener can understand - Loose Associations (cognitive slippage)
continual shifting from topic to topic without
any apparent or logical connection between
thoughts - Neologisms new, seemingly meaningless words that
are formed by combining words
15Disorganized Motor Disturbances
- Extreme activity levels (unusually high or low),
peculiar body movements or postures (e.g.,
catatonic schizophrenia), strange gestures and
grimaces
16Negative Symptoms
- Behavioral deficits that endure beyond an acute
episode of schizophrenia - More negative symptoms are associated with a
poorer prognosis - Some negative symptoms might be secondary to
medications and/or institutionalization
17Types of negative symptoms
- Anhedonia inability to feel pleasure lack of
interest or enjoyment in activities or
relationships - Avolition inability or lack of energy to engage
in routine (e.g., personal hygiene) and/or
goal-directed (e.g., work, school) activities
18Types of negative symptoms
- Alogia lack of meaningful speech, which may take
several forms, including poverty of speech
(reduced amount of speech) or poverty of content
of speech (little information is conveyed vague,
repetitive) - Asociality impairments in social relationships
few friends, poor social skills, little interest
in being with other people
19Types of negative symptoms
- Flat affect no stimulus can elicit an emotional
response. Patient may stare vacantly, with
lifeless eyes and expressionless face. Voice may
be toneless. Flat affect refers only to outward
expression, not necessarily internal experience.
20Schizophrenia Subtypes (DSM-IV)
- Paranoid Type preoccupation with one or more
delusions or frequent auditory hallucinations - Disorganized Type disorganized speech,
disorganized behavior, and flat or inappropriate
affect - Catatonic Type motoric immobility or excessive
motor activity, extreme negativism or mutism,
peculiar voluntary movement, echolalia or
echopraxia - Undifferentiated Type none of the above
- Residual Type Absence of prominent delusions,
hallucinations, disorganized speech/behavior but
odd beliefs/behavior or negative symptoms
21What causes schizophrenia?
- There is no one accepted cause for
schizophrenia. - Interactions between genetic predisposition and
environmental influences disrupt
neurodevelopmental processes leading first to
pre-morbid symptoms and then to the onset and
progression of schizophrenia.
- Heredity ? schizophrenia is genetically linked
- ? more than one gene may predispose people to
it - ? there is currently no reliable way to
predict whether a person will develop
the disease.
- Environment ? pregnancy and delivery
complications - ? childhood and prenatal virus infection
- ? urban birth and residence
- ? psychosocial factors (dysfunctional family
environment)
- Changes in brain structure ? enlarged
ventricles - ? reduced regional cerebral volumes
- ? reduced activity in the temporal lobes
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24Twin studies
- Why does one twin become schizophrenic and the
other does not? - Lower birth weight
- More physiological distress
- More submissive, tearful, sensitive
- Impaired motor coordination
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26Genes
- Genes scattered across all but 8 chromosomes have
been implicated - Most important
- Neuregulin 1 NMDA, GABA, Ach receptors
- Dysbindin synaptic plasticity
- Catechol-O-methyl transferase DA metabol.
- G72 regulates glutamatergic activity
- Others myelination, glial function
- Paternal age more cell divisions in sperm
27Structural changes in brain
- Larger ventricles
- Subgroup inverse correlation between ventricle
size and response to drugs
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31Structural changes in brain
- Hippocampus, amygdala, parahippocamp.
- Smaller in affected twin (static trait)
- Disordered hippocampal pyramidal cells
- Correlation between cell disorder and severity
- May be due to maternal influenza in 2nd trimester
- Also in entorhinal, cingulate, parahippocampal
cortex
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35Structural changes in brain
- Increased loss of gray matter in adolescence
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37Structural changes in brain
- Shrinkage of cerebellar vermis
- Thicker corpus callosum
- Frontal lobes
- Abnormal neuronal migration in one study
- Dendrites have fewer spines
- But no major structural abnormalities
- Measures of frontal function impaired
38Functional changes in brain
- Hypofrontality hypothesis
- Discordant twins low frontal blood flow only in
affected twin - Wisconsin card sorting task
- Schizophrenics cant shift attn. to other
criterion - Functional imaging frontal lobe activity lower
at rest, esp. in right hemisphere, does not
increase during task. - Drug treatment increased activation of frontal
lobes
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40Neurochemical changes
- LSD, mescaline ? confusion, delirium,
disorientation, visual hallucinations. - But schizophrenic hallucinations are mostly
auditory - Schizophrenics given LSD say its different from
their symptoms
41Dopamine hypothesis
- Amphetamine (very high doses) ? paranoia,
delusions, auditory hallucination - Also exacerbates symptoms of schiz.
- Effects blocked by DA antagonist chlorpromazine
- Phenothiazines (incl. chlorprom.) all other
typical neuroleptics block D2 receptors and
alleviate () symptoms.
42Neurotransmitter involved in schizophrenia
Dopamine-hypothesis of schizophrenia
- Clinical observations
- Conventional antipsychotic drugs inhibit D2
receptor. - Schizophrenia-like symptoms occur in amphetamine
abusers, due to excessive DA release.
- Baseline DA levels and stimulated release of DA
are abnormal in mesolimbic systems of brains from
schizophrenic patients.
? DA system plays a role in schizophrenia.
However, it is likely not to be the only and/or
main neurotransmitter system implicated.
(Freedman 2003 N Engl J Med 3491738)
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44Neurotransmitter involved in schizophrenia
Serotonin
- 5HT has been implicated in a variety of
schizophrenia symptoms - (e.g. hallucinations, cognitive dysfunction,
- sensory gating, aggression)
- Atypical antipsychotic have relatively high
affinity for 5HT2 receptors.
Blocking of 5HTRs may be a requirement for the
reduction in extrapyramidal symptoms.
45Neurotransmitter involved in schizophrenia
GABA
- Clinical observations
- Enhancing GABAergic function, primarily through
the use of benzodiazepines, has not yielded
convincing results of specific effects in
schizophrenia.
- Altered activity of GAD and altered expression
of GAT1 and GABAR subunits in prefrontal cortex
and hippocampus in brains from schizophrenic
patients.
Relation to disruption of neuronal migration
during cortex development?
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47Atypical neuroleptics
- Clozapine blocks 5-HT2A receptors gt D2
- As effective as typical neuroleptics on ()
symptoms, more effective on (-) symptoms - Fewer motor side effects (tardive dyskinesia)
- Actually increase DA release in frontal cortex
- L-DOPA can even be beneficial
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49Glutamate hypothesis
- Problem with DA hypothesis time course
- Phencyclidine (PCP) dissociative anesthetic ?
- Auditory hallucinations
- Depersonalization
- Delusions
- Noncompetitive NMDA antagonist (blocks Ca2
channel)
50Neurotransmitter involved in schizophrenia
GABA
- Clinical observations
- Enhancing GABAergic function, primarily through
the use of benzodiazepines, has not yielded
convincing results of specific effects in
schizophrenia.
- Altered activity of GAD and altered expression
of GAT1 and GABAR subunits in prefrontal cortex
and hippocampus in brains from schizophrenic
patients.
Relation to disruption of neuronal migration
during cortex development?
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53Neurotransmitter involved in schizophrenia
Glutamate-hypothesis of schizophrenia
- Clinical observations
- PCP and ketamine cause schizophrenia-like
psychoses and cognitive deficits in normal
subjects and worsens the symptoms of
schizophrenia in patients. - Gly site agonists improve outcome of treatment
in schizophrenia. - Sarcosine reduces symptoms in chronic
schizophrenics under neuroleptic treatment. - AMPA receptor potentiators administered on
medicated patients improve performance in
attention, memory and distractability tests.
- Significant reduction in CSF Glu levels in
schizophrenic subjects. - iGluR but not mGluR subunit expression is
altered in hippocampus, thalamus and cortex)
54Glutamate hypothesis
- 2 weeks PCP in monkeys ? schiz.-like symptoms
- Including poor performance on frontal
lobe-sensitive task - Dose- time-sensitive
- Ketamine (NMDA antag)? similar effects
- So, why not give glutamate agonists to treat
schizophrenia?????
55Dopamine-Glutamate interactions
- DA neurones in the substantia nigra and VTA
receive glutamatergic inputs and Glu stimulates
DA activity. - Conversely, the glutamate system is inhibited by
DA and D2R antagonists reverse the inhibition. - D2 receptors also reduce GluR-mediated activity
in corticostriatal and thalamostriatal pathways,
while D2 antagonists increase the activity. - In the striatum, an intracellular interaction
between D2 and NMDA receptors induces increased
NMDAR activity.
- Acute treatment with NMDAR antagonists increases
DA release in the PFC and sub-cortical structures
(in vivo dialysis). - Chronic treatment with NMDAR antagonists results
in decreased DA release in the PFC but not
subcortical structures (in vivo dialysis,
turnover measurements).
- Modulation of the DA system by antipsychotic
drugs influences the performance of the Glu
system. - Altered function of the Glu system affects the
performance of the DA system..
56Implications of Glu hypofunction for schizophrenia
(Konradi Heckers 2003 Pharm Ther 97 153)
57Glutamate hypothesis
- Seizures!! (also excitotoxicity)
- Try mGluR agonists 8 subtypes of mGluR
- Some modulate glutamate release
- Others modulate dopamine systems
58Genes for schizophrenia
- Recent genetic linkage studies have identified
candidate susceptibility genes for schizophrenia.
(Harrison Owen 2003 The Lancet 361 417)
- The modulation of excitatory transmission and in
particular of NMDAR function appears to be the
common link among most recently described
susceptibility genes for schizophrenia.
59Genes for schizophrenia
- RGS4 (regulator of G protein function)
- RGS4 inhibits signalling by the mGluR5, which
stimulation potentiates NMDA-mediated currents.
- DTNBP1 (encoding dysbindin-1)
- Protein levels are significantly reduced in the
hippocampal formation of schizophrenic
individuals. - However, patients with dysbindin mutations do not
show symptoms of schizophrenia.
- PPP3CC (encoding calcineurin g subunit)
- Calcineurin k.o. mice display behavioural
abnormalities reminiscent of altered behaviour
observed in schizophrenic patients.
60Genes for schizophrenia NRG1
- Neuregulin1 cell-cell signalling protein
containing an epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like
motif that bind to membrane-associated Tyr
kinases of the erbB family.
- NRG1 regulates expression of GluR subunits.
- NRG1 is colocalised with the NMDAR and modulates
its kinetic properties by phosphorylation of the
NR2 subunit.
- NRG-1 mRNA is increased in brains from
schizophrenic patients. - Significant reduction in the level of erbB3
expression in brains from schizophrenic patients.
- Mice heterozygous for mutations in the NRG1 gene
display hyperactivity in behavioural tests
similar to that observed in PCP treated mice.
61Neuregulin-1/erbB signalling and schizophrenia
(Corfas et al 2004 Nature Neuroscience 7 575)
62Genes for schizophrenia DAAO and G72
- G72 primate specific gene encodes a 153 aa
protein that interacts with DAAO (D-amino acid
oxidase) resulting in the activation of the
enzyme.
- DAAO is responsible for the catabolism of
D-serine.
- DAAO is heterogeneously distributed in the
brain. Brainstem and cerebellum are richer in
enzyme levels than forebrain regions. - DAAO is prevalent in astrocytes and glial cells,
although some studies suggest that enzyme can be
localised also in neurones. - Subcellular localisation of DAAO appears to be
peroxisomal.
63Metabolic pathway for D-serine
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65How is schizophrenia treated?
- There is currently no cure for schizophrenia.
- Treatment is aimed at reducing symptoms and
preventing psychotic relapses. Medication needs
to be continue.
- Two major types of antipsychotic medications (or
neuroleptics) - CONVENTIONAL or TYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTICS
(haloperidol) - ? control the positive symptoms very effectively
- ? side effects extrapyramidal symptoms
- (chronic tardive dyskinesia, parkinsonism,
akathisia - acute acute dystonia, neuroleptic malignant
syndrome) - ? high affinity for D2 dopamine receptors
NEWER or ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTICS
(clozapine, risperidone, olanzapine,
ziprasidone, quietapine, sertindole) ? better
at treating the negative symptoms ? milder motor
side effects but others (weight gain,
diabetes) ? they have affinity to multiple
receptor systems (DARs, 5HTRs, a1, H1, m1/4)
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