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The Biomedical Therapies

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Presentation on theme: "The Biomedical Therapies"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Biomedical Therapies
Therapies aimed at altering body chemistry.

2 Drug Therapies Antipsychotics, Anti- anxiety, Antidepressants, and Mood-Stabilizing Medications

3 Drug Therapies With the advent of drugs, hospitalization in mental institutions has rapidly declined. However, many patients are left homeless on the streets due to their ill-preparedness to cope independently out in society.

4 Psychopharmacology Psychopharmacology is the study of the effects of drugs on mind and behavior. Psychopharmatherapy is the treatment of mental disorders with medication…drug therapy. Drugs used to treat psychological disorders fall into 3 major categories: Antipsychotic Anti-anxiety Antidepressant (Mood stabilizers do not fit well into any of these categories, but they are very important drugs in the treatment of bipolar disorder.)

5 Testing New Drugs When a new drug is released, there is always too much enthusiasm. New drugs must be tested using a double-blind procedure to combat placebo and experimental effects. Double blind – To test the effectiveness of a drug, patients are tested with the drug and a placebo. Two groups of patients and medical health professionals are unaware of who is taking the drug and who is taking the placebo.

6 Antipsychotic Drugs Antipsychotic drugs (like Thorazine, Mellaril, and Haldol) are used to gradually reduce psychotic symptoms, including hyperactivity, mental confusion, hallucinations, and delusions. Antipsychotic drugs appear to decrease activity at dopamine synapses Sometimes producing unfortunate side-effects such as symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and tardive dyskinesia, an incurable neurological disorder marked by involuntary writhing and tick- like movements of the mouth, tongue, face, hands, or feet.

7 Anti-Anxiety Drugs Antianxiety drugs depress the central nervous system and reduce anxiety, apprehension, nervousness, and tension by elevating the levels of the Gamma- aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurotransmitter. Includes drugs like Valium, Xanax, Buspar, Librium, and Ativan Most widely abused drugs. GABA neurotransmitter

8 Antidepressant Drugs Antidepressants gradually elevate mood and help bring people out of a depression. They improve the mood by elevating levels of serotonin Figure 15.12: Antidepressant drugs’ mechanisms of action. The three types of antidepressant drugs all increase activity at serotonin synapses, which is probably the principal basis for their therapeutic effects. However, they increase serotonin activity in different ways, with different spillover effects (Marangell et al. 1999). Tricyclics and MAO inhibitors have effects at a much greater variety of synapses, which presumably explains why they have more side effects. The more recently developed SSRIs are more specific in targeting serotonin synapses.

9 Mood-Stabilizing Medications
Lithium Carbonate, a common salt, has been used to stabilize manic episodes in bipolar disorders. It moderates the levels of norepinephrine and glutamate neurotransmitters. It is very successful at preventing future episodes of mania and depression, but it can be toxic and requires careful monitoring.

10 Brain Stimulation Electroconvulsive Therapy and Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

11 Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a biomedical treatment in which electric shock is used to produce a cortical seizure accompanied by convulsions. ECT is used for severely depressed patients who do not respond to drugs. The patient is anesthetized and given a muscle relaxant. Patients usually get a volt shock that relieves them of depression. While the use of ECT peaked in the ‘40s and ‘50s, there has been a recent resurgence in this therapy. Video:

12 Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS)
Alternatives to ECT Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) In rTMS, a pulsating magnetic coil is placed over prefrontal regions of the brain to treat depression with minimal side effects. Reseting neurons Figure Magnets for the mind Myers: Psychology, Ninth Edition Copyright © 2010 by Worth Publishers

13 Psychosurgery

14 Psychosurgery Psychosurgery was popular even in Neolithic times.
Although used sparingly today, about 200 such operations do take place in the US alone. Preview Question 13: What is psychosurgery?

15 Advertisement for a Leucotome in the 1940's
Psychosurgery Surgery that removes or destroys brain tissue in an effort to change behavior. Antônio Egas Moniz ( ) of Portugal developed the lobotomy (previously known as a prefrontal leucotomy) in the 1930s. He was also responsible for coining the term psychosurgery. The procedure involved drilling holes in the patient's head and destroying tissue in the frontal lobes by injecting alcohol. He later changed technique, using a surgical instrument called a leucotome that cut brain tissue by rotating a retractable wire loop. Advertisement for a Leucotome in the 1940's

16 “The Lobotomist” Walter Freeman, and American neurologist and psychiatrist, was inspired by Muniz’s work and began performing his own lobotomies. However, Freeman wanted to simplify the procedure so that it could be carried out by psychiatrists in mental asylums, which housed roughly 600,000 American inpatients at the time. Roughly modeling the work of an Italian psychiatrist (Amarro Fiamberti), Freeman decided to enter the frontal lobes through the eye sockets instead of through drilled holes in the skull. In 1945, he took an icepick from his own kitchen and began testing the idea on grapefruit and cadavers. This new "transorbital" lobotomy involved lifting the upper eyelid and placing the point of a thin surgical instrument under the eyelid and against the top of the eyesocket. A mallet was used to drive the leucotome through the thin layer of bone and into the brain. The leucotome was then swept from side to side, thus severing the nerve fibers connecting the frontal lobes to the thalamus. The leucotome was then withdrawn and the procedure repeated on the other side.

17 Rosemary Kennedy before she was lobotomized by Freeman at age 23
Rosemary Kennedy before she was lobotomized by Freeman at age 23. Her father sought the lobotomy to cure what he called “moodiness,” fits of irritability and rebelliousness. He might also have been afraid that she might embarrass the family by becoming pregnant out of wedlock during one of her many escapes from the convent where she was being educated and “cared for.” After the lobotomy, Rosemary was reduced to an infantile state and needed constant care. An early advertisement from the American Journal of Psychiatry promoting transorbital lobotomy. Watch The Lobtomist, a documentary about Walter Freeman and his procedures on PBS here: (Watch “Production Line Lobotomies” and “Howard Dully’s Story” in particular)

18 Psychosurgery Psychosurgery is used today only as a last resort in alleviating psychological disturbances. Psychosurgery is irreversible. Removal of brain tissue changes the mind. Preview Question 14: How, by caring for their bodies with a healthy lifestyle, might people find some relief from depression?


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