L9 - Neuroplasticity Flashcards
Explain how grey and white matter changes throughout development.
- Almost all grey matter you are ever going to have is present at birth
- By 10 years old, you have significantly less. Amount of grey matter decreases as you get older.
- Laying down of synapses and white matter increases across development.
What is neuroplasticity?
- Ability of nervous tissue to structurally reorganize as a response to experience, injury, sensory deprivation, or learning
- Results in change in mapping of neural function to neural structure
- Typically follows experience, trauma, cerebrovascular insult, or sensorimotor deprivation
What is the difference between exotropia and isotropia?
- Exotropia: Strabismus where one eye points to the side
- Isotropia: Strabismus where one eye points to the midline
What is strabismus? How is it typically treated?
- One eye points in different direction from other eye
- Monocular vision even though vision in both eyes is intact: Brain doesn’t use signals from one eye
- Corrected by patching good eye for a few months or an ophthalmologist will shorten one of the muscles to re-align the eyes
What is recovery of function?
- Re-establishment of brain-behaviour relationships that are also affected by experience, cerebrovascular insult, trauma, or sensorimotor deprivation
What are the 9 principles of brain plasticity?
- Plasticity is common to all nervous systems and the principles are conserved across generations
- Plasticity can be analyzed at many different levels
- Two general types of plasticity
- Similar behavioural changes can correlate with different plastic changes
- Experience dependent changes interact
- Plasticity is age-dependent
- Plastic changes are time dependent
- Plasticity is related to experience
- Plasticity can be maladaptive
List 4 things that occur when the brain is injured.
- Ischemia (accumulation of fluid in tissue)
- Diaschisis (loss of function of distant brain region connected to area of damage)
- Changes in localized tissue / surrounding tissue
- Changes in cell metabolism
List the 6 steps of the metabolic cascade in order.
- Ionic changes (seconds to minutes)
- Second messengers (seconds to minutes)
- mRNA (seconds to minutes, hours to days)
- Proteins (seconds to minutes, hours to days)
- Inflammation (hours to days, weeks)
- Recovery (hours to days, weeks to months)
What are 6 examples of function restitution?
- Recovery from motor cortex damage
- Recovery from hemiplegia
- Return of reflexes
- Development of rigidity
- Grasping facilitated by other movements
- Development of voluntary grasping
- Recovery from aphasia
- Recovery from traumatic lesion
Explain the typical recovery of aphasics.
- Head injured patients show the most rapid and complete recovery
- Deficits the least severe in anomic patients and most severe in global aphasics
- Rate of recovery similar in all patients
- Progress to other stages with recovery but often stop in anomic phase
- Most recovery occurs in first 3 months
- Younger patients have better recovery
- Language areas in RH most resistant to damage
What did Teuber find when examining veterans’ recovery after traumatic brain injury?
- 50% did not recover at all
- 43% recovered visual defects
- 36% recovered from somatosensory defects
- 24% recovered from dysphagia (abnormality of language)
- 4% recovered from motor defects (likely had damage to brainstem)
Explain Mendel’s Second Law and the implications it has for neuroplasticity.
- Law of independent assortment
- During gamete formation, the formation of the segregation of the alleles of one allelic pair is independent of the segregation of the alleles of another allelic pair
- Implication is that the brain cannot know about the characteristics of body parts as they were independently inherited
- Ability to know this would be impossible without plastic brain – takes differences and creates a uniform model of control
- Because your brain doesn’t know anything about your body, all the neural mechanisms for controlling and sensing your body have to be calibrated
- Calibrating only once is not enough – must occur all the time
What is neuroplasticity?
- The property of neural tissue that permits its reuse in response to changes in the environment and body
- Dependent upon neural structural integrity
- Clinical and experimental evidence from humans and animals
What are the 7 principles that allow us to infer neuroplasticity?
- Changes in behaviour
- Changes in brain anatomy
- Changes in functional brain maps
- Changes in synaptic organization
- Changes in physiological organization
- Changes in molecular structure
- Cellular mitosis
Explain how neurplasticity can be demonstrated through behavioural change.
- Experience changes neural structure / function (learning and relearning)
- Altered experience changes neural structure / function (e.g., distortion of vision; removal of somatosensory component; pinna shape changes)