Chapter 18: Biopsychology of psychiatric disorders Flashcards

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1
Q

psychiatric disorders

A

disorders of psycholoigcal function sufficiently severe to require treatment

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2
Q

Why are psychiatric disorders difficult to diagnose?

A
  • patients suffering from the same disorder often display different symptoms
  • patients suffering from different disorders often display many of the same symptoms
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3
Q

What are positive symptoms vs. negative symptoms?

A
  1. Symptoms that seems to represent an excess of typical function
  2. Symotoms that seems to represent a reduction or loss of typical function
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4
Q

What are positive symptoms of Schizophrenia?

A
  • delusions
  • hallucinations
  • disorganized speach or thought
  • odd behavior
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5
Q

What are negative symtoms of schizophrenia?

A
  • affective flattening
  • avolition
  • catatonia
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6
Q

Def. affective flattening

A

dimished emotional expression (negative symptom)

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7
Q

avolition

A

reduction or absence of motivation (negative symptom)

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8
Q

Catatonia

A

remaining motionless, often in awkward positions for long periods (negative symptom)

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9
Q

When is schizophrenia diagnosed?

A
  • frequent recurrence of any two of the symptoms for 1 month
  • provided that one of the symptoms is delusions, hallucinations or disorganized speech.
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10
Q

Causal factors of schizophrenia

A
  • the probability of schizophrenia in a close biological relative
  • differences in experience have a significant effect on the development
  • genes have also been linked to the disorder
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11
Q

Antipsychotic drugs

A
  • a drug that is meant to treat certain symtpms of schizophrenia and bipolar disorders
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12
Q

Chlorpromazine

A
  • first antipsychotic drug
  • agitated patients with schizophrenia were calmed by chlorpromazine
  • emotionally blunted patients with chizophrenia were activated by it
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13
Q

Dopamine theory of schizophrenia

A
  • schizophrenia is caused by too much dopamine
  • antipsychotic drugs exert their effects by decreasing dopamine levels
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14
Q

Selective binding (regarding dopamine)

A
  • finding that dopamine binds to more than one dopamine receptor type
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15
Q

Revision of the dopamine theory

A
  • schizophrenia is caused by hyperactitivity specifically at D2 receptors
  • rather than at dopmaine receptors in general
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16
Q

Atypical antipsychotics

A
  • second-generation antipsychotics
  • drugst that are effective against schizophrenia
  • but do not bind strongly to D2 receptors
17
Q

Psychedelic drugs

A

drugs whose primary action is to alter perception, amotiona and cognition

18
Q

The effects of classical hallucinogens (LSD) - schizophrenia treatment

A
  • the effects of classical hallucinogens (LSD) mimic the positive symtoms of schizophrenia (hallucinations) by acting as agonsits of serotonin receptors
  • dissociative halluconogens mimic the negative symotoms of schizophrenia by acting as antagonists of glutamate receptors
19
Q

Four importatn findings from studies with poeple at risk for schizophrenia

A
  1. Volume reductions in some parts of the brain.
  2. Extensive brain changes already exist
  3. Brain changes continuw to develop after the initial diagnosis
  4. Alterations to different areas of the brain develop at different rates