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Schizophrenia and Other Disorders. A talk given by Elaine M. Hull at the Lawton Chiles High School, Tallahassee, FL, February 2007. A bit of history. Hideyo Noguchi, 1911: Syphilis (delusions, grandiosity, impulsivity, altered thought structure) is due to bacterium.
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Schizophrenia and Other Disorders A talk given by Elaine M. Hull at the Lawton Chiles High School, Tallahassee, FL, February 2007
A bit of history • Hideyo Noguchi, 1911: Syphilis (delusions, grandiosity, impulsivity, altered thought structure) is due to bacterium. • Emil Kraeplin, 1919: dementia praecox (paranoia, grandiose delusions, auditory hallucinations, abnormal emotional reg., bizarre thoughts)—partly genetic • Eugen Bleuler, 1911: key is dissociative thinking; also delusions, hallucinations, affective disturbance, autism.
Genes • Genes scattered across all but 8 chromosomes have been implicated • Most important: • Neuregulin 1: NMDA, GABA, & Ach receptors • Dysbindin: synaptic plasticity • Catechol-O-methyl transferase: DA metabol. • G72: regulates glutamatergic activity • Others: myelination, glial function • Paternal age: more cell divisions in sperm
Twin studies • Why does one twin become schizophrenic and the other does not? • Lower birth weight • More physiological distress • More submissive, tearful, sensitive • Impaired motor coordination
Structural changes in brain • Hippocampus, amygdala, parahippocamp. • Smaller in affected twin (static trait) • Disordered hippocampal pyramidal cells • Correlation between cell disorder and severity • May be due to maternal influenza in 2nd trimester • Also in entorhinal, cingulate, parahippocampal cortex
Structural changes in brain • Larger ventricles • Subgroup: inverse correlation between ventricle size and response to drugs
Structural changes in brain • Increased loss of gray matter in adolescence
Structural changes in brain • Shrinkage of cerebellar vermis • Thicker corpus callosum • Frontal lobes • Abnormal neuronal migration in one study • Dendrites have fewer spines • But no major structural abnormalities • Measures of frontal function impaired
Functional changes in brain • Hypofrontality hypothesis • Discordant twins: low frontal blood flow only in affected twin • Wisconsin card sorting task • Schizophrenics can’t shift attn. to other criterion • Functional imaging: frontal lobe activity lower at rest, esp. in right hemisphere, does not increase during task. • Drug treatment increased activation of frontal lobes
Neurochemical changes • LSD, mescaline confusion, delirium, disorientation, visual hallucinations. • But schizophrenic hallucinations are mostly auditory • Schizophrenics given LSD say it’s different from their symptoms
Dopamine hypothesis • Amphetamine (very high doses) paranoia, delusions, auditory hallucination • Also exacerbates symptoms of schiz. • Effects blocked by DA antagonist chlorpromazine • Phenothiazines (incl. chlorprom.) & all other typical neuroleptics block D2 receptors and alleviate (+) symptoms.
Atypical neuroleptics • Clozapine blocks 5-HT2A receptors > D2 • As effective as typical neuroleptics on (+) symptoms, more effective on (-) symptoms • Fewer motor side effects (tardive dyskinesia) • Actually increase DA release in frontal cortex • L-DOPA can even be beneficial
Glutamate hypothesis • Problem with DA hypothesis: time course • Phencyclidine (PCP): dissociative anesthetic • Auditory hallucinations • Depersonalization • Delusions • Noncompetitive NMDA antagonist (blocks Ca2+ channel)
Glutamate hypothesis • 2 weeks PCP in monkeys schiz.-like symptoms • Including poor performance on frontal lobe-sensitive task • Dose- & time-sensitive • Ketamine (NMDA antag) similar effects • So, why not give glutamate agonists to treat schizophrenia?????
Glutamate hypothesis • Seizures!! (also excitotoxicity) • Try mGluR agonists: 8 subtypes of mGluR • Some modulate glutamate release • Others modulate dopamine systems
Reconciliation • Maybe hypofrontality results in hyper-dopaminergic state in NAc • Carr & Sesack, 2000, JNs: • PFC sends Glu axons to VTA DA cells that PFC • Result: positive feedback to PFC • PFC sends Glu axons to VTA GABA cells that NAc • Result: PFC inhibits NAc (probably amygdala, too)
Schizophrenia Summary • PFC and hippocampus cell density and activity are lower in schizophrenics; neither works well. • Hippocampal neurons are also disorganized. • There is normally a positive feedback between PFC and VTA DA neurons that PFC • Less PFC activity decreases that (+) feedback. • There is normally a negative feedback between PFC and NAc. (May inhibit impulses, thoughts) • Less PFC activity decreases that (-) feedback.
Schizophrenia Summary • The reason D2 antagonists help (+) symptoms: inhibits mostly NAc & other limbic structures. • Few D2 receptors in PFC. • The reason PCP schizophrenic symptoms: mimics the PFC hypofunction, releases NAc. • There may also be anomalies in intracellular messengers. • No good biochemical/anatomical explanation for (-) symptoms. • Worse in those with greatest physical damage. • But atypical antipsychotics do help (-) symptoms. (How???)
Schizophrenia Summary • Possible treatments: • Metabotropic glutamate (mGluR1) agonists • Increase glutamate or DA release • Glycine or cycloserine • Bind to glycine site on NMDA receptor & enable glutamate’s effects • Neither would seizures • Not yet tested in humans
Unipolar Depression • Sad & helpless every day for weeks • Loss of interests, energy, appetite • Feel worthless • Contemplate suicide • Difficulty in concentrating • Restless agitation • Little or no pleasure from eating or sex
Unipolar Depression • 2 X as often in women as in men • ~ 5% of adults in US have “clinically significant” depression • A genetic component • 60% concordance for monozygotic twins • 20% for dizygotic twins • Especially for early-onset & among female relatives • Not a single-gene defect
Increased blood flow also in: • Parietal cortex (somatosensory/attention) • Posterior temporal cortex (language) • Anterior cingulate (emotional processing)
Effects of high cortisol levels • Increase cell death in hippocampus • Probably due to apoptosis • Brief cortisol exposure increases hippocampal activity helps remember acute stressor. • Hipp negative feedback on cortisol levels • Lengthy high levels increase cell death, also decrease neurogenesis • As a result vicious circle: High cortisol hipp. neurotoxicity less (-) feedback high cortisol.
Effects of high cortisol levels • Depressed people often have bad memories and difficulty reasoning. • SSRIs increased survival of new neurons in hipp., increased memory and reasoning. • Hypothesis: • 5-HT &/or NE cAMP CREB BDNF • 5-HT4, -6, -7 & β are coupled to Gs • BDNF in rats also increases cell survival in hippocampus and decreases behavioral measures of animal “depression.”
Altering sleep patterns sometimes helps depression • Most depressed people are phase-advanced in their sleep cycles. • Some are helped temporarily by total sleep deprivation for 1 night. • Others are helped by going to bed from 5pm to midnight for a week & gradually going back to normal.
Electroconvulsive therapy • Can help those who don’t respond to drug therapy or are suicidal. • Unclear why it works. • Increases D1 & D2 receptors in NAc • Decreases postsynaptic βNE receptors