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Schizophrenia, Affective Disorders, Anxiety Disorders

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Positive vs negative symptoms. Slide 3. Schizophrenia ... Pharmacology. The dopamine hypothesis ... Pharmacology ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Schizophrenia, Affective Disorders, Anxiety Disorders


1
Schizophrenia, Affective Disorders, Anxiety
Disorders
2
Schizophrenia
  • Background
  • Sex
  • Age of onset
  • Subtypes
  • Positive vs negative symptoms

3
Schizophrenia
  • Positive Symptoms assoc with overactive DA
    systems
  • Thought disorders
  • Hallucinations
  • Delusions
  • Negative SymptomsL assoc with brain damage
  • Flat affect
  • Impoverished speech
  • Anhedonia
  • Social withdrawl
  • Lack of initiative persistence

4
Schizophrenia
  • Heritabiligy
  • Adoption studies
  • Twin studies
  • MZ vs DZ
  • Chorion

5
Schizophrenia
  • Pharmacology
  • The dopamine hypothesis
  • Abnormalities in the DA pathways (esp mesolimbic
    pathway, ventral tegmental -gt nucleus accumbens
    and amygdala)

6
Schizophrenia
  • Mesolimbic pathway
  • Nucleus accumbens amygdala
  • Cocaine, amphetamines stimulate nucleus accumbens
    ? reinforce behavior ? in large doses, produce
    positive symptoms
  • Abnormalities in DA transmission
  • Release more DA
  • More DA receptors

7
Schizophrenia
  • Pharmacology
  • Chlorpromazine typical neuroleptic a dopamine
    receptor blocker (D2 receptors primarily in motor
    pathways decrease positive symptoms
  • Clozapine atypical neuroleptic an
    antipsychotic drug that blocks D4 receptors in
    the nucleus accumbens.
  • 1/3 dont respond to meds
  • Tardive dyskinesia
  • Supersensitivity

8
Schizophrenia
  • Brain Differences

9
Schizophrenia
  • Brain Differences

10
Schizophrenia
  • Environmental Factors
  • Season of birth
  • Viral epidemics
  • Population density
  • Latitude
  • Prenatal malnutrition
  • Rh incompatibility
  • Maternal stress

11
Schizophrenia
  • Early Development
  • Ratings of home movies
  • Poorer social adjustment

12
Major Affective Disorders
  • Major Depressive Episode
  • At least 4 symptoms for at least 2 wks (appetite
    disturbance, change in weight, sleep
    disturbances, psychomotor agitation or
    retardation, decreased energy, feelings of
    worthlessness or guilt, difficulty
    thinking/concentrating, suicidal ideation )
  • 2-3 times more common in women
  • 15.9 unipolar depression commit suicide
  • Lifetime incidence of 5.8

13
Major Affective Disorders
  • Manic Episode
  • Abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive,
    or irritable mood must last at least 1 week
  • Must be accompanied by at least 3 of the
    following inflated self-esteem, decreased need
    for sleep, flight of ideas, distractibility,
    psychomotor agitation, jumping from topic to
    topic
  • Lifetime incidence of .4-.6
  • Equal across sexes

14
Major Affective Disorders
  • Heritability
  • Individuals with close relatives 10xs more likely
    to develop an affective disorder
  • MZ 69 DZ 13

15
Major Affective Disorders
  • Physiological Treatments for Depression
  • Monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors
  • Increase NE, serotonin, and DA
  • Side effects
  • Tricyclic antidepressants
  • Inhibit reuptake of 5-HT and NE
  • Specific Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)
  • Also reduce OCD and social phobia
  • Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)
  • 3/wk for 1-2 wks

16
Major Affective Disorders
  • Physiological Treatments for Depression
  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TEMS)
  • Applied to prefrontal cortex, reduces depression
    without any known side effects

17
Major Affective Disorders
  • Physiological Treatments for Mania
  • Lithium
  • Treat the manic phase
  • May interfere with production of phosphoinositide
    system
  • May increase production of neuroprotective
    proteins
  • Side effects
  • Danger of overdose
  • Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
  • Anti-seizure medication

18
Major Affective Disorders
  • Role of Monoamines
  • Monoamine Hypothesis
  • Unsupported by lack of response to cocaine or
    amphetamine which target DA
  • Suicidal depression is related to decreased CSF
    5-HIAA (5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid)
  • Lower 5-HT2 receptors in neocortex of depressed
  • Tryptophan depletion procedure caused relapse
    into depression in patients taking antidepressants

19
Major Affective Disorders
  • Role of Monoamines
  • Monoamine Hypothesis
  • Unsupported by lack of response to cocaine or
    amphetamine which target DA
  • Suicidal depression is related to decreased CSF
    5-HIAA (5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid)
  • Lower 5-HT2 receptors in neocortex of depressed
  • Tryptophan depletion procedure caused relapse
    into depression in patients taking antidepressants

20
Major Affective Disorders
  • Substance P
  • A peptide secreted as a neurotransmitter and
    neuromodulator in several regions of the brain
  • May be involved in emotional behavior, the
    response to stress, and the symptoms of
    depression.
  • Binds with brain receptors in the amygdala,
    hypothalamus, ventral tegmental area, locus
    coeruleus, and the cerebral cortex.

21
Major Affective Disorders
  • Evidence for Brain Abnormalities
  • Repeated episodes of mania/depression
  • Increased lateral ventricles

22
Major Affective Disorders
  • Evidence for Brain Abnormalities
  • Amygdala activity correlated with depression
  • Orbitofrontal cortex more active in depressed
  • Subgenual prefrontal cortex less active in
    depressed and more active during mania

23
Major Affective Disorders
  • Genes Brain Abnormalities
  • 5-HTTLPR polymorphism
  • Short-allele carriers
  • Reduced gray matter in perigenual cingulate
    amygdala (critical for processing negative
    emotion provide a feedback circuit implicated in
    the extinction of negative affect)
  • Relative uncoupling of this circuit
  • Magnitude of coupling inversely predicted almost
    30 of variation in temperamental anxiety

24
Major Affective Disorders
  • Role of Circadian Rhythms
  • Depression
  • Shallow sleep reduced slow-wave (Stages 3 4)
    sleep increased Stage 1 sleep
  • Repeated wakings (esp toward mornings)
  • REM occurs earlier

25
Major Affective Disorders
  • Role of Circadian Rhythms
  • REM Sleep Deprivation
  • Alleviates depression slowly over several weeks
  • Some have long-term improvement
  • Medications suppress REM (delay onset and
    decrease duration)

26
Major Affective Disorders
  • Role of Circadian Rhythms
  • Total Sleep Deprivation

27
Anxiety Disorders
  • Panic Disorder
  • Onset usu young adulthood
  • Women 2.5 xs more likely
  • Symptoms
  • Shortness of breath
  • Clammy sweat
  • Heartbeat irregularities
  • Dizziness
  • Faintness
  • Feelings of unreality
  • Feel as though he/she might die

28
Anxiety Disorders
  • Panic Disorder
  • Large number of substances can produce panic
    attacks in individuals with panic disorder
    sodium lactate, carbon dioxide, yohimbine
    (increase NE, firing of locus coeruleus), and
    caffeine
  • Hypersensitivity of CO2 receptors ? when
    activated these receptors act as suffocation
    alarms

29
Anxiety Disorders
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Obsessions thoughts that will not leave
  • Compulsions behaviors one feels compelled to
    perform
  • Incidence 1-2
  • Slightly more common in females
  • MZ vs DZ
  • Assoc with Tourettes
  • Can be secondary to birth trauma, encephalitis,
    head trauma, strep (basal ganglia, cingulate
    gyrus, and prefrontal cortex)

30
Anxiety Disorders
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Increased activity in frontal lobes (esp
    orbitofrontal cortex) and caudate nucleus
  • Cingulotomy surgical removal of fiber bundles in
    the subcortical frontal lobe
  • Trichtillomania
  • Onychophagia
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