PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS Drugs have revolutionized psychiatric treatment since the 1950's. Most psychoactive drugs act stereospecifically on receptors, enzymes,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chemotherapy.
Advertisements

Neurobiology of Schizophrenia, Mood Disorders, and Anxiety Disorders Chapter 18 Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2006 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate.
Biopsychology of Psychiatric Disorders
Schizophrenia The Unwell Brain. Disturbance in the Neurochemistry  The first discovery in the mid 1950s was that chronic usage of large daily doses of.
1. If a stimulus shifts the potential inside a neuron from the resting potential to a more negative potential, the result is __________. A) hyperpolarization.
SCHIZOPHRENIA. A bit of history Hideyo Noguchi, 1911: Syphillis (delusions, grandiosity, impulsivity, altered thought structure) is due to bacterium.
 incidence  characteristics  causes?  treatments?
NEUROCHEMISTRY NEURONS (BRAIN CELLS) RELEASE NEUROTRANSMITTERS (CHEMICALS THAT COMMUNICATE BETWEEN NEURONS) INTO SYNAPSES - GAP BETWEEN NEURONS RECEPTORS.
Surgeon General’s Report 1999 (Part 2) Mood Disorders and Schizophrenia.
REVOLUTION – 1970’s - PRESENT FROM PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSONALITY EARLY LIFE PSYCHOTHERAPY TO BIOLOGICAL DISEASE BRAIN MEDICATION.
NEURONS NEUROCHEMISTRY NEURONS (BRAIN CELLS) RELEASE NEUROTRANSMITTERS (CHEMICALS THAT COMMUNICATE BETWEEN NEURONS) INTO SYNAPSES - GAP BETWEEN NEURONS.
BEFORE LOBOTOMY, SHOCK, COMA - NOW DRUGS CHANGE NEUROCHEMISTRY OF BRAIN ELEVATE OR LOWER LEVELS OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS IN SYNAPSES AND WHAT RECEPTORS.
Chapter 15 Psychological Disorders. Substance Abuse and Addictions Mental illness.
Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Psychosis involves loss of contact with reality, symptoms include: 1) Disorganized and deluded thinking 2) Disturbed perceptions.
Mental Illness. Schizophrenia Features of Schizophrenia (Positive Symptoms) Positive symptoms –Psychosis Hallucinations –Auditory –Visual –Olfactory,
Carlson (7e) Chapter 17: Schizophrenia and the Affective Disorders.
Biological Therapies. Helping Professionals Who Can Administer Biological Therapies Medical specialists –Psychiatrists M.D. –Neurosurgeon M.D. Other Medical.
Biological explanations of depression
Psychlotron.org.uk Schizophrenia: brain chemicals How might neurotransmitters be implicated in mental illness?
Describe and Evaluate Biological Treatments for Schizophrenia
Chapter Fifteen Alcoholism, Mood Disorders, and Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia The Unwell Brain. Disturbance in the Neurochemistry  The first discovery in the mid 1950s was that chronic usage of large daily doses of.
Types of Treatment.
Neurobiology of Schizophrenia, Mood Disorders, and Anxiety Disorders Chapter 18 Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2006 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate.
The Biomedical Therapies Module 42. The Biomedical Therapies These include physical, medicinal, and other forms of biological therapies. 1.Drug Therapies.
Mood Disorders Lesson 25. Mood Disorders n Unipolar depression n Mania n Bipolar disorder n Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) ~
Schizophrenia Onset - late adolescent and early adulthood Symptoms - delusions - inappropriate affect - hallucinations - incoherent thought - odd behavior.
The Etiology of Depression (BLOA)
What Therapies Are Used to Treat Psychological Problems?
The Biological Basis of Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia
PowerPoint  Lecture Notes Presentation
EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Edition in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2008.
Schizophrenia Lecture 23. Mental Illness: Definition n Characteristically Controversial n Deviations from normal l Behavior l Thought Processes l Affect.
1 Chapter 16 Schizophrenia
Chapter Fifteen Alcoholism, Mood Disorders, and Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia: drugs Synaptic transmission Mechanisms of drug action Drugs used with schizophrenia psychlotron.org.uk.
Chapter 16 Schizophrenia
Biological Explanations and Therapies for Schizophrenia
Copyright (c) Allyn & Bacon1 Chapter 15 part 1 Schizophrenia This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Explanations of Schizophrenia Describe and evaluate both physiological and psychological explanations of Schizophrenia (25)
Drug Therapies Psychopharmacology Classifications Antipsychotic (neuroleptics) Mood Regulators (Antidepressants) Antianxiety.
Chapter 15: Psychological Disorders. Major Depression 1. A disorder of mood where a person feels depressed for at least two weeks at a time 2. Episodes.
Biological treatments of Schizophrenia. Brain Structure (Neuronatomy) Anderson (1990) looked at CAT scans of DZ twins, one diagnosed with schizophrenia,
Schizophrenia: Etiology and Treatment
Xavier Fung Miriam Hjertnes.  Thought, mood and anxiety disorder  Neurotransmitter and messaging centre disturbed  Affects ones perception of reality.
The biological approach and treatments AS Psychology, AQA A, unit 2- individual differences (psychopathology)
PSYCHOLOGY, Ninth Edition in Modules David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2010.
 Disorders of mood ◦ found throughout history  unipolar or major depression  bipolar or manic depression.
Biological Treatments of SZ Drugs – Atypical & Typical Learning Objectives.
Describe and Evaluate Biological Explanations for Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia – Biological Therapies 2 Drug Therapy (chemotherapy)
Biomedical Therapies. Antipsychotic Drugs Antipsychotic drugs (like Thorazine, Mellaril, and Haldol) are used to gradually reduce psychotic symptoms,
The study of the causes of diseases
Ch. 13: Biomedical Therapy: Biological Approaches to Treatment
Network interactions in schizophrenia — therapeutic implications
Chemotherapy.
Drugs, Shocking, and Surgery
Describe and Evaluate Biological Explanations for Schizophrenia
DOPAMINE HYPOTHESIS.
Seratonin and Dopamine in the CNS
Introduction to depression and antidepressant agents
Schizophrenia: brain chemicals
SCHIZOPHRENIA.
The Biological Basis of Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia
Module 23: Mood Disorders & Schizophrenia
Biological Approach to Abnormality
Describe and Evaluate Biological Explanations for Schizophrenia
Abnormal Psychology Unit 13 Module 50: Mood Disorders.
Describe and Evaluate Biological Treatments for Schizophrenia
Describe and Evaluate Biological Treatments for Schizophrenia
Presentation transcript:

PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS Drugs have revolutionized psychiatric treatment since the 1950's. Most psychoactive drugs act stereospecifically on receptors, enzymes, or other active protein elements of the nerve cell (e.g., ion channnels, blocked by local anesthetics). Existence of a drug can lead to discovery of a mechanism (e.g., opiates, salicylates, chlorpromazine). The majority of psychoactive drugs affect synaptic transmission. Drugs can have synergystic (combinatorial) interactions with other drugs. (Some may be good, many are bad) Many drugs have side effects (We will talk about tardive dyskinesia, a side effect of long term treatment with antipsychotic drugs).

There are Two Classes of Neurotransmitter Receptors: Ionotropic Receptors, when activated by neurotransmitter, allow ions to cross the cell membrane via channels Metabotropic Receptors, when activated by neurotransmitter, trigger enzymatic activity The same neurotransmitter, e.g., glutamate or acetylcholine, can activate both ionotropic and metabotropic receptors Ionotropic receptors will be illustrated here

What brain abnormalities might underlie such a devastating disorder? Theories on the Mechanism(s) of Schizophrenia Genetic Vulerability: MZ (identical) twin concordance >4 X more likely than DZ (sibling) twins; MZ twins average 50% discordance rate suggesting environmental influences Experience-based Vulnerability: More frequent in lower socioeconomic classes; stress may precipitate relapse; social network an important buffering influence (often disrupted by schizophrenic’s own behavior)

Brain structure-based theories implicate frontal and medial temporal lobes * Ventricular enlargement: In effect this means that tissue adjacent to the ventricles shrinks--temporal lobe, hippocampus *Several reports of shrinkage of frontal lobes, fewer synapses per neuron, reduced dendritic field size in prefrontal brain regions *fMRI and PET (blood flow/metabolism) studies indicate “hypofrontality,” decreased activity of frontal lobes

Pharmacological treatment-based theories *From Chlorpromazine in the 1950s to the recent past, “typical” neuroleptic drugs, effective in schizophrenia had in common the blockage of the D 2 Dopamine receptor. (They differ in therapeutic and negative side effects.) * The Dopamine systems of the brainstem project to limbic (“mesolimbic”) and frontal cortical (“mesocortical”) brain regions. Both may be involved in Schizophrenia. *We won’t detail receptor actions because there will probably be more receptors when you’re MDs.

“Atypical” Antipsychotic Drugs: Affect both Dopamine and Serotonin Systems * These drugs may do better at controlling both positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia * Some “atypicals” (e.g. clozapine) have high affinity for newly discovered D 4 Dopamine receptors * Atypicals appear Not to cause Tardive Dyskinesia

Drug Therapy for Schizophrenia: Medication alone is never the treatment for a patient Medications may be important components of a larger overall treatment plan

Proposed Brain Mechanisms Underlying Mood Disorders * While traumatic or stressful events can lead to symptoms of mood disorder, this is typically treated as a separate, usually transient “adjustment disorder with depressed mood.” * There are theories that some (or much) depression may arise in situations with poor social support, chronic stress, negative personal or occupational situations, etc. * As with schizophrenia, theories of the brain mechanisms underlying mood disorders have been driven by the mechanisms of action of effective drugs.

Proposed Brain Mechanisms Underlying Mood Disorders *One of the most common biological abnormalities in patients with major depression is hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the stress response system. *Dexamethasone, a synthetic adrenal corticosteroid, normally suppresses pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) release for 24 hours. *In depressed patients this suppression is often less pronounced or less prolonged. *There is also evidence for elevated levels of thyrotropin- releasing hormone (TRH) and other thyroid abnormalities in depression.

Drug-based Theories of Mood Disorders I * The initial treatments that were effective in treating many cases of depression had in common raising the levels of catecholamines (norepinephrine and dopamine) at the synapse (MAO inhibitors, reuptake blockers-- “tricyclic antidepressants). * These led to the Norepinephrine and Catecholamine (includes Dopamine) hypotheses of mood disorders. Reduced catecholamine availability at the synapse caused depressive disorders * These pharmacological phenomena take effect almost immediately, yet treatment may last 2 weeks or more before significant symptom remission occurs.

Drug-based Theories of Mood Disorders II * More recently, serotonin has been implicated in mood disorders. * Brain serotonin is low in many depressed patients and reduced levels of the serotonin metabolic breakdown product (5-HIAA) are common in cerebrospinal fluid. This is common among suicidal depressives. * Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (Prozac) are effective in restoring mood. * But why do they take so long to work?