1 / 69

Neuroplasiticity ch. 10 and Cerebral Hemispheres ch. 16

Neuroplasiticity ch. 10 and Cerebral Hemispheres ch. 16. Neuropsychological Disorders, Damage to CNS, and Neuroplasticity. Ch. 10. Outline. Causes of Brain Damage Neuropsychological Diseases Neural Damage: Degeneration, Regeneration, Reorganization, and Recovery. Causes of Brain Damage.

dezso
Download Presentation

Neuroplasiticity ch. 10 and Cerebral Hemispheres ch. 16

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Neuroplasiticitych. 10and Cerebral Hemispheresch. 16

  2. Neuropsychological Disorders, Damage to CNS, and Neuroplasticity Ch. 10

  3. Outline • Causes of Brain Damage • Neuropsychological Diseases • Neural Damage: Degeneration, Regeneration, Reorganization, and Recovery

  4. Causes of Brain Damage

  5. Tumors • Group of cells growing independently of the rest of the body; tumor can be encapsulated or infiltrating; it can be benign or malignant • Metastatic tumors originate in one organ and spread to another; the symptoms of multiple brain tumors are often the first signs of lung cancer • 20% of brain tumors are meningiomas that grow in the meninges; they are encapsulated and benign

  6. Cerebrovascular Disorders • Stroke is the common term • May be due to cerebral hemorage, the bursting of aneuryms (balloon-like dilations of weak areas of blood vessels)

  7. Cerebrovascular Disorders • Strokes are also caused by a cerebral ischema, a disruption of blood supply to an area of the brain • In thrombosis, a plug becomes lodged at the site of formation; the plug may be due to a blood clot, fat, oil, cancerous cells, air bubbles • In embolism a plug travels and becomes lodged in a smaller blood vessel • In arteriosclerosis the blood vessel walls thicken and the space inside narrows from accumulation of fat

  8. Cerebrovascular Disorders • The brain damage caused during an ischemic episode is believed to be due to an excessive release of excitatory amino acids • Glutamate, the brain’s most prevalent excitatory neurotransmitter, is released in excessive quantities when blood vessels are blocked

  9. Cerebrovascular Disorders • The excessive glutamate overactivates glutamate receptors on the postsynaptic membrane sites thus too many Na+ and Ca++ ions are allowed to enter the postsynaptic neuron; this overabundance of ions triggers either • More excessive release of glutamate, causing a cascade of this toxic effect • Triggers a sequence of reactions that kills the postsynaptic neuron

  10. Cerebrovascular Disorders • The brain damage caused by ischema takes a while to develop; does not occur equally in all regions of the brain and exact physiological mechanism varies from region to region • Researchers are currently studying the ability of NMDA receptor blockers administered directly after a stroke to reduce subsequent brain damage

  11. Closed-head Injuries • A brain contusion is an injury in which there is bleeding from the brain in absence of a laceration; the bleeding results in a hemotoma (a bruise or collection of clotted blood) • Contusions are often caused by the brain hitting the skull and are often contre coup (on the other side of the brain from the blow)

  12. Closed-head Injuries • Concussion is the diagnosis when a blow to the head disrupts consciousness, but no evidence of physical damage can be found; the punch drunk syndrome is general demetia due to an accumulation of many concussions

  13. Infections • Encephalitis is the general term for inflammation of the brain resulting from infection • Bacterial infections can be treated with antibiotics, but if left untreated they can cause meningitis (inflamation of meninges), brain abscesses (pockets of pus), and general paresis (a syndrome of insanity and dementia) • Viral infections include infections that preferentially attack the nervous system (rabies) and some that sometimes attack the nervous system (mumps and herpes viruses)

  14. Neurotoxins • Brain damage can be produced by a variety of toxins in the environment; “mad hatters” were the result of mercury poisoning; “crackpots” were originally those who drank tea from cracked ceramic pots with lead cores; the result was poisoning • Sometimes drugs used to treat a disease can have neurotoxic effects; for example tardive dyskinesia is a disorder produced by prolonged exposure to certain antipsychotic medications

  15. Genetic Factors • Some genetic disorders are accidents of cell division (e.g., Down Syndrome is caused by an extra chromosome in pair 21 producing slowed intellectual development • More commonly, genetic disorders are products of abnormal genes, usually recessive

  16. Neuropsychological Disorders

  17. Epilepsy • Epilepsy is any disorder in which epileptic seizures recur spontaneously • When convulsions (motor seizures) are present, it is easy to diagnose; include tremor, rigidity, loss of balance, or loss of consciousness • However, many seizures involve subtle changes in thought, mood, and or behavior with no convulsions whatsoever

  18. Epilepsy • The observation of epileptic spikes in the EEG is evidence of epilepsy • Epileptic auras sometime precede an epileptic seizure • There are two main classes of seizures:

  19. Epilepsy • Partial Seizures: do not involve the entire brain simple partial seizures produce symptoms in the sensory or motor areas; start in one part of the body and spread to other parts of the body as discharges spread through the brain complex partial seizures are often restricted to the temporal lobes; sometimes motor symptoms vary in complexity ( simple, compulsive, repetitive behaviors) to long sequences of behavior that are out of context but for the most part normal epileptics typically have no memory of the event

  20. Epilepsy • Generalized seizures: involve the entire brain; they may start from a focus and gradually spread or they may begin simultaneously throughout the entire brain include grand mal seizures (“big trouble”) with symptoms of tremor, rigidity, loss of balance and consciousness, tongue biting, incontinence, turning blue from hypoxia and petit mal seizures (“small trouble”)

  21. Parkinson’s Disease • Attacks 0.5% of the population; usually 50-60 yr olds, males • The first symptom is often a tremor or stiffness of the fingers • Symptoms of the full-blown disorder are tremor at rest, muscular rigidity, slowness of movement, and a masklike face

  22. Parkinson’s Disease • There is no intellectual deterioration • Its cause is unknown but it is associated with degeneration of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra in basal ganglia; this neurons project to the striatum • Treated with L-DOPA, the metabolic precursor of dopamine

  23. Huntington’s Disease • It is also a motor disorder; it is inherited but rare, its cause is understood and is always associated with demetia • Its main symptoms are complex jerky movements of entire limbs; demetia occurs later in the disease, which is always fatal

  24. Huntington’s Disease • Caused by a single dominant gene; 50% chance for offspring to get it, the reason it has not disappeared is that the first symptoms do not appear until after the age of reproduction (40-50 yrs)

  25. Multiple Sclerosis • A disease of the CNS myelin; breakdown of myelin leads to breakdown of associated axons; development of areas of hard scar tissue throughout the CNS • Common symptoms are ataxia (loss of motor coordination), weakness, numbness, tremor, and poor vision • Generally worsening progression of the disorder

  26. Alzheimer’s Disease • 15% of people over 65 and 35% over 85 suffer • First sign is forgetfulness and emotional instability (depression); eventually there is total dementia and an inability to perform even the most simple responses (e.g., swallowing); it is terminal

  27. Alzheimer’s Disease • Caused by amyloid plaques (clumps of degenerating neurons and an abnormal protein called amyloid) and tangles of neurofibrils within neurons • Loss of neurons is common; plaques, tangles, and neuron loss are often most common in areas involved in memory such as the hippocampus, amygdala, and entorhinal cortex

  28. Alzheimer’s Disease • Clear genetic component; 50% chance of suffering if have immediate family member with AD • Cholinergic neurons often die early in the course of AD; cholinergic agonists are effective at reducing symptoms early in disease

  29. Neural Damage

  30. Degeneration • Two types of deterioration of the neuron following damage: • Anterograde deterioration involves distal segments of the axon and occurs rapidly; the entire segment of axon that was separated swells and breaks into fragments over 2-3 days • Retrograde deterioration involves changes in the proximal segments of the axon from the site of damage back to the soma over 2-3 days; if early changes show an increase in the size, neuron will regenerate the axon; if early changes show decrease, the entire cell will die

  31. Degeneration • Transneuronal degeneration is the spread of degeneration from damaged neurons to neurons on which the synapse; anterogradetransneuronal degeneration is when neurons postsynaptic to the damaged cells are affected; retrogradetransneuronal degeneration is when neurons that are presynaptic to the damaged cell are affected

  32. Regeneration • Is a regrowth of damaged neurons; this occurs more readily in invertebrates than in higher vertebrates; is hit-or-miss in the PNS of mammals, and is almost nonexistent in CNS of adult mammals

  33. Regeneration • In mammalian PNS regeneration, regrowth from the proximal stump of the damaged neuron begins 2-3 days after damage; if the myelin sheath is intact, regrowth may be guided through the myelin sheath and toward the original target • However, if a segment of the nerve has been cut the regenerating axons may grow into incorrect sheaths and thus to incorrect targets; or else the axon may grow in a tangled mass without direction

  34. Regeneration • Collateral sprouting is the growth of axon branches from adjacent healthy neurons and may occur at the site of degenerating neurons • CNS neurons can regenerate if they are placed in the PNS, whereas PNS neurons cannot regenerate in the CNS; the secret to regeneration in the PNS appears to be the Schwann cells that form myelin sheaths in the PNS • Schwann cells promote regeneration by releasing both growth factors and CAMs (guide growing axons to targets)

  35. Reorganization • Damage to sensory and motor pathways, the sensory and motor cortices, and distortion of sensory experiences have all been used to study neural reorganization in adult mammals • Reorganization of neural connections is believed to occur via 2 types of changes:

  36. Reorganization • Rapid reorganization of neural connections usually results from experience; this is believed to reflect the strengthening of existing connections; and • Gradual reorganization usually results from neural damage; this is believed to reflect the establishment of new connections via collateral sprouting

  37. Reorganization • The actual extent of neural reorganization and recovery of function after brain damage remains unclear; it is difficult to conduct well-controlled studies on populations of brain-damaged patients, and the nervous system can compensate for brain damage in a way that looks like true recovery of function

  38. Reorganization • Cognitive reserve is important in the apparent recovery of cognitive function that is often observed; this seems to be due to the adoption of alternative strategies to solve a problem, rather than true recovery of function • 2 general conclusions have emerged:

  39. Reorganization • Small lesions are more likely to be associated with recovery of function than large lesions • Recovery is more likely in young patients

  40. Lateralization & The Split Brainand Cortical Localization of Language Ch. 16

  41. Outline • The Dominant Left Hemisphere • Tests of Cerebral Lateralization • The Split-Brain Experiment • Tests of Split-Brain Patients

  42. Aphasia and Apraxia:The Dominant Left Hemisphere • In 1836, Dax reported that not one of his 40 or so patients with speech problems had displayed damage restricted to the right hemisphere • 25 yrs later, Broca reported the results of the postmortem examination of two aphasic patients (patients with deficits in the use of language that are not attributable to general sensory, motor, or intellectual dysfunction)…

  43. Aphasia and Apraxia:The Dominant Left Hemisphere • Both had diffuse left hemisphere damage that seemed to be centered in an area of the inferior left prefrontal lobe, just in front of the primary motor face area • This became known as Broca’s area that is associated with grammar and speech production

  44. Aphasia and Apraxia:The Dominant Left Hemisphere • Liepmann discovered that apraxia (difficulty performing movements with either side of the body when asked to do so, but not when performing them spontaneously) was almost always associated with left-hemisphere damage

  45. Aphasia and Apraxia:The Dominant Left Hemisphere • This led to the view that all complex activities were performed by the left hemisphere; the left and right hemispheres thus became known as dominant and minor hemispheres, respectively

  46. Tests of Cerebral Lateralization • The first evidence of language laterality came from comparisons of the effects of left and right unilateral lesions; today, the sodium amytal test and dichotic listening test are commonly used to assess language laterality

  47. Tests of Cerebral Lateralization • PET of FMRI techniques have revealed that there is typically more activity in the left hemisphere than the right during language-related activities

  48. Tests of Cerebral Lateralization • Many studies have reported a relation between speech laterality and handedness; the following general conclusions have been reached:

  49. Tests of Cerebral Lateralization • Nearly all (about 95%) right-handed subjects are left-hemisphere dominant for speech; • most left-handed or ambidextrous subjects (about 70%) are also left-hemisphere dominant for speech; and • Early left-hemisphere damage can cause the right hemisphere to become dominant for speech and the left hand to be preferred

  50. The Split-Brain Experiment • In 1953, Myers and Sperry performed an experiment on cats that changed the way that we think about the brain; and it provided a means of comparing the function of the two hemispheres • It was designed to reveal the function of the brain’s largest commissure, the corpus callosum

More Related