Schizophrenia and its treatment Flashcards
Psychoses symptoms
Positive symptoms
- delusions (paranoid)
- hallucinations (auditory)
- incoherence
- catatonic or hyperactive behaviour
Negative symptoms (withdrawing)
- flat affect
- Cognitive deficits (attention and memory)
- 50% may attempt suicide, 10% of which are successful.
- Psychotic episodes can occur for hours, days, or long term (months, years).
Schizophrenia
About 1% of the population, regardless of social class, culture, education or race, suffer from schizophrenia at some point in their lives.
Schizophrenia affects people in their youth (teens through mid-life, then decreases with age)
Contributing factors include: drug addiction,
alcoholism,
extreme depression,
physical brain damage, overdose of medication, and genetic predisposition.
Schizophrenia ranks among the top 10 causes of disability in developed countries.
Long term prognosis
Ten and thirty years after diagnosis of schizophrenia:
25%
25 -35% 15-25% 10-15% 10-15%
Completely Recover
Much Improved, relatively independent Improved, but require extensive support Hospitalized, unimproved
Dead (Mostly Suicide)
Is there evidence of a genetic component of schizophrenia?
Yes.
100+ potential susceptibility genes known; so very complex!
These are involved in neuronal development, glutamatergic function and synaptic connectivity.
Risks increase with multiple affected family members.
The brain in schizophrenia: Basal Ganglia
Basal Ganglia
- Involved in movement and emotions and in integrating sensory information. Abnormal functioning in schizophrenia is thought to contribute to paranoia and hallucinations (excessive blockade of dopamine receptors in the basal ganglia by traditional antipsychotic medication leads to motor side effects.
The brain in schizophrenia: Frontal lobe
Frontal lobe
- critical to problem solving, insight and other high-level reasoning. Pertubations in schizophrenia lead to difficulty in planning actions and organising thoughts.
The brain in schizophrenia: Auditory system
Auditory system
- Enables humans to hear and understand speech. In schizophrenia, overactivity of the speech area (Wernickes area) can create auditory hallucinations - the illusion that internally generated thoughts are real voices coming from the outside.
The brain in schizophrenia: Limbic System
Limbic System
Involved in emotion. Disturbances are thought to contribute to the agitation frequently seen in schizophrenia
The brain in schizophrenia: Hippocampus
Hippocampus
Mediates learning and memory formation, intertwines functions that are impaired in schizophrenia
The brain in schizophrenia: Occipital Lobe
Occipital lobe
Processes information about the visual world. People with schizophrenia rarely have full-blown visual hallucinations, but disturbances in this area contribute to such difficulties as interpreting complex images, and recognising motion and reading emotions on others faces.
Postulated neuronal dysfunction in schizophrenia: Mesolimbic pathway
Increased activity in this pathway can cause hallucinations, delusions and other positive symptoms.
Overactivity = positive symptoms
Postulated neuronal dysfunction in schizophrenia: mesocortical pathway
Decreased activity in the pathway can cause apathy, withdrawal, lack of motivation and pleasure and other negative symptoms.
Dysfunction = negative/cognitive
Dopamine Hypothesis of Positive Symptoms of
Schizophrenia
- Repeated administration of stimulants, like amphetamines cocaine, and levodopa which increase DA activity, can cause psychosis that resembles positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
- Low doses of amphetamine can induce a psychotic reaction in schizophrenics in remission.
• Postsynaptic DA receptor antagonism is the common mechanism that explains antipsychotic properties pertaining
to positive symptoms; typical antipsychotic medications generally block D2 receptors.
Dopamine receptors
D2 receptors are the most predominant subtype in the brain:
Regulate mood, emotional stability in the limbic system
and movement control
in the basal ganglia.
Limitations of the Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia
- NMDA receptor antagonists worsen cognitive, positive and negative symptoms in unmedicated schizophrenic patients; NMDA agonists may improve symptoms.
- NMDA receptor “hypofunction” may reduce the level of activity of mesocortical DA neurons, reducing activity in frontal cortex.
- There may be decreased levels of glutamate in CSF, prefrontal cortex and hippocampus of schizophrenics.
- Atypical antipsychotics have low affinity for D2 receptors, but are good antagonists of 5-HT2 receptors
- There are wide-spread and complex changes in the 5-HT system in schizophrenics, suggesting involvement of 5-HT.
- Dopamine based antipsychotics are only partially effective in most (70%) and ineffective entirely for some patients.
- Thus, glutamate and serotonin systems may also be involved.