Chapter 5 Test (Psychotic Disorders) Flashcards
Amphetamine challenge
Scanning for radioactive markers of dopamine receptor occupancy following the administration of amphetamine. A measure of dopamine activity in the brain.
Amphetamine induced psychosis
A psychotic state similar to schizophrenia, induced by amphetamine overdose.
Antipsychotic
A drug that is used to treat symptoms of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders
Atypical antipsychotics
Antipsychotic drugs that different in their mechanism of action from their predecessors, the phenothiazines.
What was the first Atypical antipsychotic widely used?
clozapine (Clozaril)
dopamine hypothesis
Excessive dopamine activity in the mesolimbic-cortical systems of the brain underlie schizophrenia and its symptoms.
Electric shock therapy
The induction of a severe seizure in a patient by delivering electric shocks to the head. Used as a treatment for drug resistant schizophrenia and depression.
Extrapyramidal symptoms
Severe motor impairment following disruptions to neurons outside of the major pyramidal tracks descending from the medulla. These symptoms are often caused by long-term use of phenothiazine drugs.
Frontal lobotomy
Separating the prefrontal areas from the remainder of the frontal cortex by knife cuts or by destroying these areas with ice picks inserted behind the eyes. Used as an early treatment for sever psychosis.
Insulin shock
A comatose state induced by severe hypoglycemia following an injection of insulin. Used as an early treatment for schizophrenia.
Negative symptoms
Symptoms of schizophrenia characterized by features removed from normal behavior and functioning.
What are the Negative symptoms of Schizophrenia
1) Lack of affect
2) Social Withdrawal
3) cognitive impairment
4) Muscle rigidity
Positive Symptoms
Symptoms of schizophrenia that are characterized by features that are added to normal behavior and functioning.
What are the positive symptoms of Schizophrenia?
1) Delusions
2) Hallucinations
3) Motor Symptoms
4) Emotional Turmoil
Prepulse Inhibition
The ability to inhibit a startle response to a strong stimulus if given a warning signal or prepulse stimulus. Schizophrenic patients show deficits in prepulse inhibition.
Do Schizophrenic patients show a deficit or abundance of prepulse inhibition.
A deficit
Receptor competition
The ability of a drug to compete with a neurotransmitter for receptor binding is measured by its capacity to displace a radioactive ligand.
What is used to predict drug effectiveness against schizophrenic symptoms?
Receptor competition
Tardive dyskinesia
Involuntary movements and motor tics.
Where does tardive dyskinesia often appear?
1) Mouth
2) tongue
After what does tardive dyskinesia appear?
After long-term phenothiazine use.
What is the most common type of hallucination?
Auditory (in Wernicke’s)
When does Schizophrenia typically emerge?
Early adulthood and is life-long for most
What is the lifetime prevalence of Schizophrenia?
1%
Where is the greatest incidence of Schizophrenia?
Among African-Caribbeans in England
Is there a consensus on what gene or genes are involved in Schizophrenia?
No
Do sons and daughters have a higher chance of getting Schizophrenia if their parents have it?
Yes it is tenfold
Does environment or genetics play a greater role in the etiology of Schizophrenia?
Environmental
How long do symptoms need to be present before diagnosis of schizophrenia?
one month
How many symptoms need to be present for diagnosis of Schizophrenia?
Two
When were antipsychotic drugs discovered?
1950s
What were early treatments for Schizophrenia?
1) Physical restraints
2) Insulin shock
What was the most widely used surgical procedure for Schizophrenia?
Frontal lobotomy
By who and when were frontal lobotomies introduced?
By Antonio Moniz in late 1930s