Schizophrenia Flashcards

1
Q

Define and describe schizophrenia

A

Positive symptoms- Delusions, hallucinations, thought disorder

  • Negative symptoms- social withdrawal, decreased emotional response, low motivation
  • Dementia- cognitive dysfunction
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2
Q

Which neurones and receptors are affected in schizophrenia?

A
  • Over activity of subcortical and limbic D2 dopamine receptors
  • Post synaptic D2 and D4 receptors
    Hypofunctional dopamine D1 receptors
  • Dysfunctional development of frontal cortex- negative and cognitive symptoms
  • 5HT and cortical glutamate hypofunction
    DA hyperactivity
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3
Q

Is it developmental or degenerative?

A

Developmental-
brain structure abnormalities present at onset of psychosis and not progressive
- Enlarged ventricles and reduced temporal lobe vol (6-10%)- hippocampus

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4
Q

Describe:
Early lesion hypothesis
Late lesion hypothesis

A

Early lesion- Foetal or perinatal event- virus, hypoxia, premature, low birth weight birth interacting with normal development
- Late lesion- deviation in maturation during adolescence- cannabis?

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5
Q

How are dopamine pathways affected?

A

Mesocortical - reduced

Mesolimbic- ventral tegmental area enhanced

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6
Q

Describe amphetamine psychosis

A

Release of DA in brain
Amphetamine effects antagonised by antipsychotics/neuroleptic drugs
Anti psychotics are D2 receptor antagonists

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7
Q

Which is more effective- alpha or beta flupenthixol

A

a isomer

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8
Q

List the extra pyramidal side effects of Chlorpromazine

A

H1 antagonist- sedation
D2 antagonism in chemoreceptor zone- antiemesis
Tuberoinfundibular pathway- hyperprolactinaemia
Nigrostriatal pathway- extra pyramidal effects

Acute dystonia
Parkinsonism- lack of dopamine in striatum
Akathisia
Tardive dyskinesia- dopamine excess in striatum

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9
Q

How do dopamine antagonists affect prolactin?

A

increase prolactin release

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10
Q

Describe 4 types of dopamine receptors

A

D1- post synaptic (&D5 excitatory, increase cAMP)
D2- pre and post
D3- post synaptic, in nucleus accumbens (decrease cAMP) not in striatum
D4- low expression cortex and limbic system

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11
Q

When is Clozapine used?

A

Pt resistant to benefit from 2 other antipsychotics

5HT serotonin receptor antagonism in frontal cortex
D2 antagonism in mesolimbic pathway
Works for +ve symptoms, less for -ve
combined with CBT

Side effects: lower affinity for D2 receptors- less EP side effects
No hyperprolactinaemia
Muscarinic receptor antagonism
Alpha1 antagonism- miosis, cutaneous flushes, postural hypotension
5HT2 antagonism- increased appetite, weight gain

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12
Q

Describe attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

A

Inattentive, impulsive and hyperactive behaviour- early onset

  • Polygenic- small contribution from each gene
  • Several genes related to dopamine function
  • Structural abnorms in cortical region and basal ganglia
  • DA and NA dysfunction- increased striatal DAT (DA transporter)
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13
Q

Describe how ADHD is treated

A
Non pharmological behavioural therapy
- Stimulant drugs- release DA and NA
- Methylphenidate- DA reuptake blocker
- Dexamphetamine- reuptake blocker and causes release
- New drugs non stimulants
Reuptake inhibitor- atomexetine
a2 agonist- guanfacine
- Increase cortical function- improve attention
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