PH2113 - Neurodegenerative Disease and Epilepsy 3 Flashcards
Can the brain repair itself?
Areas of cell proliferation in the adult brain
- neurogenesis
New neurones can be formed
- in healthy adults
- important for memory
Not enough to repair in diseases
What are the two major blood vessels that supply the brain?
Two major vessels supply the brain
- internal carotid
- vertebral arteries
What is the Circle of Willis?
A circulatory anastomosis formed from the internal carotid, anterior and posterior cerebral arteries that supplies blood to the brain and surrounding structures
What are the four main causes of a cerebrovascular accident?
Thrombosis
- obstruction of a blood vessel by a locally forming clot
Embolism
- obstruction of a blood vessel by an embolus formed elsewhere
Hypoperfusion
- lack of blood supply to the brain
- systemically low blood pressure
- e.g. shock
Haemorrhage
- an accumulation of blood within the cranial cavity
What is an ischaemic stroke?
Blood flow to the brain is blocked by a blood clot
Thrombotic strokes
- when a blood clot forms in an artery
Embolic strokes
- begin with a clot forming elsewhere in the body that breaks loose and travels to the brain
- heart
- neck
Combination of symptoms
- numbness or weakness on one side of the body
- trouble speaking
- difficulty with vision or balance
Treatable with tPA within 4.5 hours
What is a haemorrhagic stroke?
Weak blood vessel bursts
- bleeds into the brain
Intracerebral haemorrhage
- weak blood vessel breaking inside the brain
Subarachnoid haemorrhage
- weak blood vessel breaking on the surface of the brain
Patients will likely experience a sudden onset headache or head pain
How does a stroke cause cell death?
Necrosis in the ischaemic core
Apoptosis in the surrounding tissues
Vascular response activates leukocytes and other inflammatory mediators
Acute inflammatory response
- Blood-Brain Barrier injury and further infiltration of immune cells
Leaky Blood-Brain Barrier can cause oedema and worsen tissue damage
Inflammation mediated release of cytokines and free radicals contributes to cell injury and death
Evidence for excitotoxicity (low ATP leads to Ca leakage) triggers excessive synaptic glutamate release
Excess Ca leads to mitochondrial dysfunction
What is the typical age of onset of Parkinson’s disease?
60s
What is the incidence of Parkinson’s disease in the UK?
1 in 500
- 10,000 diagnosed each year
- 1 in 20 will be under 40
- early onset
How is Parkinson’s disease diagnosed? (symptoms wise)
3 of 4 Cardinal symptoms
- TRAP
- tremor
- rigidity
- akinesia/bradykinesia
- postural instability
The tremor doesn’t develop in many people
Micrographia
- small handwriting
Altered posture
Shuffling gait
Hypomimia
- stiff face muscles
What is the pathology of Parkinson’s disease?
1960, Hornykiewicz
- PD brains had < 10% of normal dopamine levels in substantia nigra and corpus striatum
Neuronal loss of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway
- serotonergic
- cholinergic
- noradrenergic pathways to a lesser extent
Lewy bodies
- protein inclusions that contained alpah-synuclein, tau
- CNS
- PNS
What is the pathological process of Lewy bodies in Parkinson’s disease?
Rise up through brainstem
Pattern of symptoms as disease progresses
- constipation
- sleep disorders
- loss of sense of smell
What other symptoms are associated with Parkinson’s disease?
Mental changes
- dementia
- depression
- apathy - lack of interest, enthusiasm, or concern
Motor changes
- postural instability
- freezing of gait
- speech abnormalities
- dysphagia - struggling to swallow
Autonomic nervous system dysfunction
- constipation
- sexual dysfunction
- urinary problems
- sweating
Sleep disturbances
- sleep fragmentation
- sleep apnoea
- REM behaviour disordered
- restless leg syndrome
Sensory phenomena
- pain
- dysthesia
When is the onset of Parkinson’s disease symptoms?
When the critical balance of dopamine in the brain is lost
What are the general causes of Parkinson’s disease?
Accidental toxin administration
Pesticide/herbicide exposure
Well water
- farms
Head injury
Virus
- sleep sickness
- viral encephalitis
Antipsychotics
- dopamine receptor agonists
Food and water
- aluminium content
Decreased risk
- smoking
- caffeine