Title: Development of the NS
1Development of the NS
- start with a single cell that begins to divide!
2(No Transcript)
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5Neurulation
- Gives rise to neural tube (which gives rise to
the CNS)
6Neurulation
- http//worms.zoology.wisc.edu/frogs/neuru/keller_n
eur.html
7CNS development
- What determines what and where a neuron should
be? - very complicated numerous models pluripotent
(versatile) to begin with - role of nearby chemical factors that can
influence things
8How do neurons get to where they need to be?
- cortex has multiple layers with different
size/shape neurons - - radial glia in cortex
9Neuronal migration in cortex
- http//rakiclab.med.yale.edu/pages/corticalNeuronM
igration.php - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vZRF-gKZHINkfeature
PlayListpB3AD14F3484810FEplaynext1playnext_f
romPLindex24
10Other regions -
- growth cones and lamellipodia
- cell attractants and repellants
11- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFgmt2RBow0Ifeature
related
12- Once neuron reaches destination it needs to
- form synaptic connections
- make neurotransmitter
- elongate its axon
- make postsynaptic and presynaptic receptors
- JUST TO NAME A FEW THINGS!!!
-
13Some things that happen during CNS development
- apoptosis programmed cell death
- what controls apoptosis
- many things!
- activity
- drugs?
- environment?
14Amazing it all works!!!!
- two disorders where brain development does not go
quite as planned - autism and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
- similar in that these both involve changes in
brain during developmental - developmental disorders
- differences
- one is preventable!
15Autism
- characteristics
- Delayed or unusual speech patterns
- High pitched or flat intonation
- Lack of slang or "kidspeak"
- Difficulty understanding tone of voice and body
language as a way of expressing sarcasm, humor,
irony, etc. - Lack of eye contact
- Inability to take another's perspective (to
imagine oneself in someone else's shoes) - hypo or hypersensitive to environmental stimuli
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFuWWie1DlJY
16Additional personality characteristics
- Engage in repetitive behaviors and ritualized
activities, ranging from lining up items to
following a rigid routine OCD symptoms - Have one or a few passionate interests,
- Have difficulty in making and keeping multiple
friends, - Prefer activities that require relatively little
verbal interaction.
17Incidence of autism
18Evidence for CNS?
- possible deficits in complex or higher order
cognitive abilities - evoked potentials
- auditory and visual ERPs altered
- processing of emotional facial expressions
- - ERPs
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22Developmental Issues Following Fetal Alcohol
Exposure
23Definitions
- Teratogen a substance capable of interfering
with fetal development - Teratology the biological study of birth defects
- Behavioral Teratology the study of how agents
can affect behavior (so affects brain)
24Historical View of Alcohol as a Teratogen
- Foolish, drunken, or harebrain women most often
bring forth children like unto themselves
Aristotle in Problemata - Behold, thou shalt conceive and bear a son And
now, drink no wine or strong drink. - Judges 137
25Alcohol as a Teratogen 20th Century
- the idea of germ poisoning by alcohol in
humans may be safely dismissed - Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1, 1940
- The offspring of alcoholics have been found
defective not because of alcoholism of the
parents but because the parents themselves came
from a defective stock. - Journal American Medical Association,
132419, 1946 - Ethanol drip was used to treat premature labor.
- 1973 First scientific paper naming Fetal Alcohol
Syndrome -
26Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Fetal alcohol syndrome is the leading preventable
cause of mental retardation. What is it, how
does it affect people, what can we do about it?
27Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Diagnostic Criteria
- Pre- and/or postnatal growth deficiency
- Evidence of central nervous system dysfunction
- Specific pattern of facial features
28FAS Characteristic Facial Features
Streissguth, 1994
29FAS Only the tip of the iceberg
- Fetal alcohol syndrome
- Fetal alcohol effects
- Clinical suspect but appear normal
- Normal, but never reach their potential
Adapted from Streissguth
30Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)
ARND Alcohol-Related Neurodevelopmental
Disorder ARBD Alcohol-Related Birth Defects
31Statistics
- Approximately 1 FAS birth out of 1000 live births
in the US - Approximately 3-6 FASD births out of 1000 live
births in the US - Estimated costs 2.8 billion/year
32Cause of FASD
- The sole cause of FASD is women drinking
alcoholic beverages during pregnancy. - Alcohol is a teratogen.
Of all the substances of abuse (including
cocaine, heroin, and marijuana), alcohol produces
by far the most serious neurobehavioral effects
in the fetus. IOM Report to Congress,
1996 .
33Data from recent CDC report
- more than 130,000 pregnant women/yr in US drink
at levels that may increase risk of FAS - rates of frequent and binge drinking in pregnant
women have NOT declined in the last 8 years
34(No Transcript)
35General Intellectual Performance
NC
PEA
FAS
Standard score
FSIQ
VIQ
PIQ
IQ scale
36Executive functioning deficits
Move only one piece at a time using one hand and
never place a big piece on top of a little piece
1
3
2
Starting position
Ending position
Mattson, et al., 1999
37Behavioral characteristics associated with Fetal
Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
- hyperactivity, response inhibition deficits,
attentional problems, motor coordination
deficits, executive function (planning) problems,
38Clinical Implications..
- Poor judgement
- Attention deficits
- Arithmetic disabilities
- Memory deficits
- Problems with abstract thought
- Impulsivity
- Easily victimized
- unfocused or distractible
- difficulty handling
- difficulty learning from experience
- difficulty under-standing consequences
- poor frustration tolerance
39Secondary Disabilities of Persons With an FASD
Percent of Persons With FAS or FAE Who Had
Secondary Disabilities
? Age 6 ? Age 12 ? Age 21
40Evidence for CNS damage
- plenty of data
- cerebellum
- cerebral cortex
- corpus callosum
- basal ganglia
41Brain damage resulting from prenatal alcohol
photo Clarren, 1986
42(No Transcript)
43Change in brain size
Cerebrum
Cerebellum
Corpus Callosum
Mattson et al., 1994
44Corpus callosum abnormalities
Mattson, et al., 1994 Mattson Riley, 1995
Riley et al., 1995
45Risk Factors
- Dose of alcohol
- Pattern of exposure - binge vs chronic
- Genetics
- Maternal characteristics
- Reactions with other drugs
- Nutrition
- Developmental timing of exposure
46Body and Brain Develop inDifferent Stages in
Pregnancy
47Animal models Example of the comparability of
effects
- Growth retardation
- Facial characteristics
- Heart, skeletal defects
- Microcephaly
- Reductions in basal ganglia and cerebellar
volumes - Callosal anomalies
- Hyperactivity, attentional problems
- Inhibitory deficits
- Impaired learning
- Perseveration errors
- Feeding difficulties
- Gait anomalies
- Hearing anomalies
Driscoll, et al., 1990 Samson, 1986
48Alcohol-Exposed Rodent Models Show Same
Behavioral Deficits
Hyperactivity Motor Deficits
49Interventions
- protective factors
- interventions and stable environment and
guardianship (for kids as they grow up) - numerous programs exist maybe not enough but
progress is being made
50Pharmacotherapy and/or environmental manipulations
51EE
- Reduces many of the behavioral deficits reported
- increases dendritic spines (in controls and drug
treated)
52Pharmacological manipulations
- drugs that
- increase cholinergic activity
- reduce glutamate activity
- just naming a few seem to reduce some of
alcohols effects on the developing brain