Term
What are some candidate endophenotypes that may increase risk of pt from schizo spectrum to schizo? |
|
Definition
working memory, sensory motor gaiting, glial cell abnormalities, oculomotor fuctioning |
|
|
Term
What are the postulated pre-morbid predictors of schizophrenia? |
|
Definition
social functioning, organizational ability, interest in physical activity, individual autonomy, and intellectual fuctioning |
|
|
Term
is there a large genetic component? |
|
Definition
yes--offspring of dual mating is about 40%. MZ = 50% |
|
|
Term
Does paternal age matter? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the startle response? |
|
Definition
When I bang on a desk, you startle. But a prepulse of clappiong should reduce the startle. However, in pts with schizophrenia, there is much less reduction with the prepulse, they will continue to startle. |
|
|
Term
Do SZ have the same startle response? |
|
Definition
No--they do not have a reduced startle response with a prepulse. |
|
|
Term
In the hippocampus, what do schiz pts have a reduction of? |
|
Definition
dysbindin-1 and VGluT-1 in hippocampal formation |
|
|
Term
What are possible environmental factors? |
|
Definition
season of birth (birth in late winter/early spring increases risk, probably becasue of exposure to the Flu), nutritional deficiency, viral infection (flu) |
|
|
Term
What is the possible neurobiological hypothesis? |
|
Definition
Primary lesion in prefrontal cortex (PFC) - genetic and intrauterine environmental factors - aberrant GABAergic circuitry |
|
|
Term
When you see a primary lesion in the PFC? |
|
Definition
* PFC normally comes “on-line” in adolescence - PFC function required to handle stress in adolescence - Stress becomes overwhelming, triggering psychosis - The PFC defect manifests as negative symptoms |
|
|
Term
What does a PFC deficit cause? |
|
Definition
* PFC deficit causes excessive mesolimbic activity - Excess limbic DA transmission produces positive symptoms
* Aberrant mesolimbic activity may engender - neuroplastic processes such as sensitization - neurotoxic effects |
|
|
Term
According to this hypothesis, what causes negative symptoms? positive symptoms? |
|
Definition
the PFC defect manifests as negative symptoms and - Excess limbic DA transmission produces positive symptoms |
|
|
Term
in the PFC, what genese might you see a difference in? |
|
Definition
Presynamptic machinery, GLUT, GABA |
|
|
Term
What circuitry might be f-ed up? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Explain the "genetic disorder of synapse." |
|
Definition
there is cellular neuropathy interacting with dysregulated dopaminergic transmission (with possible influence from deffective COMT) that creates cognative and other trait features AS WELL AS psychotic symptoms respectively |
|
|
Term
What are the 2 neurotransmitter associated with Schiz? |
|
Definition
dopamine and glut/NMDA glut receptor |
|
|
Term
What is the dopamine hypothesis? |
|
Definition
A deficit may result in a psychotic state. D2 receptor binding correlates with antipsychotic efficacy of medications;
Psychostimulants (amphetamine, cocaine) mimic positive psychotic symptoms |
|
|
Term
what is the GLut Hypothesis? |
|
Definition
NMDA glutamate receptor antagonists (PCP, ketamine) mimic both positive and negative symptoms of an acute schizophrenic break.
NMDA receptor blockade at the level of thecortical interneuron can lead to glutamatergic hyperactivity in associate pyramidal cells.
Increased glutamate activity can lead to neurotoxic and neuroplastic effects (and to a hyperdopaminergic state). |
|
|
Term
What does this mean in terms of Tx? |
|
Definition
Reversal of PCP effects by a Glut agonist have some effect. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Why do you need to medicate to prevent relapse? |
|
Definition
when you are psychotic, you destroy brain tisssue (so the more the relapses, the more the destruction)--and antipsychotics reverse this. |
|
|
Term
What abnormal neuronal synchrony is seen? |
|
Definition
no production of brain activity necessary to distinguish btw square and no square. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Pathogenesis: Strong component of genetic susceptibility; Probable environmental insult during gestation; Onset in early adulthood during time of synaptic refinement; Multiple non-specific structural & functional abnormalities; Deficit in cortical synaptic function (interneurons?) gives rise to failures in cortical integration, cognition, motivation; Resulting increase in subcortical DA function gives rise to episodic positive symptoms |
|
|