basal ganglia disease Flashcards

1
Q

basal ganglia structures

A
2 subgroups:
Rostral:- 
Striatum 
•	Putamen 
•	Caudate nucleus 
Globus Pallidus 
•	Internal segment 
•	External segment 
Caudal:-
Subthalamic nucleus 
Substantia nigra
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2
Q

motor disorders associated with basal ganglia dysfunction

A
  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Huntington’s disease
  • Dystonia
  • Gilles de la Tourette syndrome
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3
Q

Psychiatric disorders associated with basal ganglia dysfunction

A
  • Obsessive compulsive disorder

* Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

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4
Q

secondary damage associated with basal ganglia dysfunction

A
  • Cerebral palsy

* Wilson disease

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5
Q

function of basal ganglia

A

facilitation
integration
fine tuning of movements

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6
Q

what causes Parkinson’s disease

A
  • increased muscle tone (spasticity), reduced movements
  • not enough dopamine in substantia nigra – loss of dopaminergic neurons
  • substantia nigra appears ‘faded’ – less dopamine production – less byproduct (black pigment – neuromelanin)
  • less dopamine means that the external globus pallidus will not be able to inhibit the subthalamic nucleus meaning it will in turn excite the internal global pallidus resulting in the inhibition of the thalamus and thus a decrease in movement
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7
Q

symptoms of Parkinson’s

A
Brady/Akinesia
•	Problems with doing up buttons, keyboard etc
•	Writing smaller
•	Walking deteriorated: Small steps, dragging one foot etc
Tremor
•	At rest
•	May be on one side only
Rigidity
•	Pain
•	Problems with turning in bed
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8
Q

treatment of Parkinson’s

A

• Drugs mostly aim at correction of dopamine deficit
• L-DOPA
However:
But:
• More and more cells die
• The drugs work shorter and shorter
• The longer on treatment, the more likely are the patients to develop side effects, in particular dyskinesias

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9
Q

alternative treatment for PD

A

deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus – inhibits the subthalamic nucleus meaning that the thalamus does not get inhibited and can thus excite the cortex resulting in improved movement

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10
Q

what causes Huntington’s disease

A
  • decreased muscle tone, overshooting movements

* too little GABA resulting in too much dopamine

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11
Q

clinical features of HD

A
  • Chorea
  • Dementia/psychiatric illness
  • Personality change
  • Atrophy of ventricles
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12
Q

clinical genetics of HD

A
  • Autosomal dominant

* Fully penetrant

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13
Q

treatment of HD

A

dopamine receptor blockers

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