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Psyc 689 Clin Psychopharmacology

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Title: Psyc 689 Clin Psychopharmacology


1
Psyc 689 Clin Psychopharmacology
  • Introduction-Neuroanatomy

2
Instructor Contact Details
  • Paul J. Wellman
  • Office Psychology 248
  • Phone
  • 979-845-2557 (Office)
  • 979-845-2581 (Dept)
  • 979-845-4727 (Fax)
  • 979-777-3163 (Cell)
  • Email PJW_at_PSYC.TAMU.EDU
  • Web site http//psychology.tamu.edu/courses/Wellm
    an/689.html

3
Psyc 689 Course Details
  • Lectures are Wednesday
  • 9 am-12 pm
  • Exams 2 exams each worth 100 points (exams will
    be taken in class)
  • Readings are from Handbook of Clinical
    Psychopharmacology for Therapists (4e) by
    Preston, O Neal, and Talaga (2005)

4
Overview Of Course Topics
  • Neurophysiology
  • Neurochemistry
  • Neuroanatomy (functional and neurochemical)
  • Basic principles of pharmacology
  • Specific disorders
  • Psychoses
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Issues of treatment
  • Side effect profiles
  • Subject characteristics (gender, age, health)
  • Psychopharmacology Resources (PDR)

5
Physical Approaches to Altering Behavior
  • Trephining
  • ECT
  • Psychosurgery
  • All are based on the idea that altering brain
    function can alter behavior
  • Risk-benefit issues for these treatments

6
ECT
7
Psychosurgery
8
Psychopharmacology
  • Psychopharmacology is the study of the effects of
    drugs on the nervous system and on behavior
  • The term drug has many meanings
  • Medication to treat a disease
  • A chemical that is likely to be abused
  • An exogenous chemical that significantly alters
    the function of certain bodily cells when taken
    in relatively low doses (chemical is not required
    for normal cellular functioning)

9
Development of Psychoactive Drugs
  • Alcohol (?)
  • Cannabis (THC)
  • Opiates
  • Caffeine (1300 Ethiopia)
  • Cocaine (1200-1500 Incas cocaine isolated in
    1859)
  • Nicotine (1556 Western Europe)
  • Ether used as an inhalation toxicant
  • Hallucinogens (peyote)
  • Stimulants (amphetamine syn in 1887)
  • Medicinal chemistry

http//itsa.ucsf.edu/ddrc/histdrg_frset.html
10
Evolution of Localization of Function
11
Brocas Area
  • Patient Tan showed major deficit in speech
    (aphasia) following a stroke
  • Brocas autopsy of Tans brain (1861) noted
    damage in the left hemisphere
  • the lesion of the left frontal lobe was the
    cause of the loss of speech
  • Case report conclusion was correct
  • Brocas paper can be read at http//psychclassics
    .yorku.ca/Broca/perte-e

12
Artificial Stimulation of Brain
  • Neurons in a region can be artificially activated
    to assess the role of that region in behavior
  • Electrical stimulation involves passing
    electrical current through a wire inserted into
    brain
  • Cincinnati physician and brain stimulation
  • Conducted in prostitute with bone cancer of skull
  • Patient died, but not related to electrical
    stimulation
  • Penfields cortical stimulation studies
    (Montreal)
  • Chemical stimulation can involve infusion of an
    excitatory amino acid such as glutamate into a
    region
  • A cannula implanted into a region can be used to
    deliver drug solutions into that region
  • Chemical stimulation can be more specific than
    electrical stimulation (glutamate activates cell
    bodies, not axons)

13
Hunger and Reward After Lateral Hypothalamic
Stimulation
14
Neuroanatomy Terms
  • The neuraxis is an imaginary line drawn through
    the spinal cord up to the front of the brain
  • Anatomical directions are understood relative to
    the neuraxis
  • Anterior (rostral) toward the head
  • Posterior (caudal) toward the tail
  • Ventral (inferior) toward the belly
  • Dorsal (superior) toward the back (top of head)
  • Location in brain
  • Ipsilateral same side of brain
  • Contralateral opposite side of brain

15
Planes of Section
  • The brain can be sectioned in three planes
  • Each section provides a different view of the
    internal anatomy of the brain
  • Sagittal
  • Coronal (or transverse)
  • Horizontal

16
Two Nervous Systems
  • The nervous system consists of two divisions
  • The central nervous system (CNS) is comprised of
    the brain and spinal cord
  • The peripheral nervous system (PNS) is comprised
    of the cranial/spinal nerves and peripheral
    ganglia
  • PNS nerves project to target organs and to
    muscles (efferent)
  • These nerves also carry sensory information to
    the brain (afferent)

17
Views of the CNS
  • Anatomical
  • Nuclei and fibers
  • Functional
  • Sensory, motor, integrative
  • Emotion, reward, memory, sleep and arousal
  • Lesion studies, functional imaging studies
  • Neurochemical pathways
  • Dopamine, serotonin, glutamate, GABA, glycine

18
Levels of the CNS
  • Cerebral Cortex and brain hemispheres
  • Cortical lobes (4 bone-defined, 2 internal)
  • Gyri and sulci markers
  • Fibers, tracts, commisures, nerves, ganglia,
    nuclei, fasciculi (us)
  • Neurons
  • Neuron components
  • Synapses and neurotransmitters (NTs)
  • Receptors (auto-, post-synaptic)
  • Neuron membranes and associated channels
  • Ligand-gated voltage-gated

19
Midline Brain View
Motor
Sensory
20
Cerebral Cortex
  • The cerebral cortex forms the outer surface of
    the cerebral hemispheres
  • Cortex surface is convoluted by grooves
  • Sulci (small grooves)
  • Fissures (large grooves)
  • The bulges in cortex are termed gyri
  • The cortex is primarily composed of cells, giving
    it a gray appearance
  • The cortex is formed from 6 layers of cells
  • Cortex can be divided into 4 lobes frontal,
    parietal, occipital, and temporal (limbic makes 5)

21
Orbitofrontal Cortex
  • Humans are able to interact socially and to
    understand social situations
  • The analysis of social situations requires an
    intact orbitofrontal cortex
  • Phineas Gage dynamite tamping rod penetrated
    orbitofrontal cortex
  • Gage exhibited reduced inhibitions and
    self-concern
  • Jacobsen reported calming action of frontal lobe
    damage in monkeys
  • Led to the development of prefrontal lobotomy
    technique (Moniz)

22
Frontal Lobe Neuropathology
  • Paralysis (usually flaccid if upper body neuron)
  • Paresis (weakness)
  • Impaired dexterity
  • Motor impersistence
  • Subclinical catatonia and motor retardation
  • Impairment smooth eye-tracking
  • Elevated blink rate

23
Primary Sensory and Motor Cortex
24
Motor Cortex
  • Multiple motor systems control body movements
  • Walking, talking, postural, arm and finger
    movements
  • Primary motor cortex is located on the precentral
    gyrus
  • Motor cortex is somatotopically organized (motor
    homunculus)
  • Motor cortex receives input from
  • Premotor cortex
  • Supplemental motor area
  • Frontal association cortex
  • Primary somatosensory cortex
  • Planning of movements involves the premotor
    cortex and the supplemental motor area which
    influence the primary motor cortex

25
Divisions of Motor Cortex
26
Motor Homunculus
27
Parietal Lobe Neuropathology
  • Issues in receptive speech, naming, comprehension
  • Tactile discrimination difficulty
  • Vestibular processing (Area 2)
  • Route finding issues (spatial)
  • Calculation problems
  • Right parietal lobe spatial neglect
  • Time interval estimate difficulties
  • Prosopagnosia (w/ inf. Temporal lobe)

28
Visual Cortex Function
  • V4 responds to color and
  • perception
  • V5 responds to movement
  • TEO involved in color discrimination, 2-d
    pattern discrimination
  • TE neurons respond to 3-d
  • (a face or a hand)

form
objects
29
Occipital Lobe Neuropathology
  • Cortical blindness
  • Visual eye movement difficulties (area 8)
  • Achromatopsia (rod vision, lacks color perception
  • Visual neglect (agnosias)
  • Gaze disorders

30
Receptive Fields
  • Receptive Field (RF) Those attributes of a
    stimulus that will alter the firing rate of a
    given sensory cell
  • Can measure the RF at each level of sensory
    system
  • There are as many RFs as there are cells in a
    sensory system
  • Look for commonalities of fields at each level of
    the system
  • Cortex is organized into columns, with each
    column sharing an attribute

31
Primary Auditory Cortex
32
Temporal Lobe Neuropathology
  • Misidentification syndromes Prosopagnosia
  • Amnestic syndromes (hippocampus)
  • Central deafness (areas 41,42)
  • Wernicke related dysphasias (Area 22)
  • Receptive
  • Conductive type
  • Hypo- and hypersexuality
  • Panic/fear states

33
Limbic System
  • The limbic system is comprised of
  • Hippocampus involved in learning and memory
  • Amygdala involved in emotion
  • Mammillary Bodies
  • The fornix is a fiber bundle that interconnects
    the hippocampus with the mammillary bodies

34
Hippocampal Damage and Amnesia
  • Severe anterograde amnesia follows bilateral
    damage to the hippocampus
  • Patient H.M. suffered from severe epilepsy
  • To minimize his epilepsy, H.M.s surgeons removed
    his medial temporal lobe (including the
    hippocampus)
  • Following surgery, H.M. showed severe anterograde
    amnesia
  • No retention for events that have occurred since
    1953
  • Can recall events that occurred prior to 1953
  • H.M.s amnesia was attributed to hippocampal
    damage
  • Patient Boswell herpes encephalitis led to
    bilateral damage to the mesial temporal lobe
  • Amygdala, hippocampus, entorhinal cortex)
  • Severe anterograde AND severe retrograde amnesia

35
Emotion and the Amygdala
  • Threat stimuli increase neural firing and fos
    activity within central nucleus of the amygdala
  • Humans show increased amygdala activity (PET
    studies)
  • Lesions of central nucleus diminish emotional
    responses
  • Reduced fear responses to threat stimuli
  • Reduced chance of developing ulcers to stress
  • Reduced levels of stress hormones
  • Electrical stimulation of central nucleus induces
    fear and agitation
  • Central amygdala nucleus is important for the
    expression of emotional responses to aversive
    stimuli

36
Diencephalon
  • Diencephalon consists of
  • Thalamus contains nuclei that receive sensory
    information and transmit it to cortex
  • Hypothalamus contains nuclei involved in
    integration of species-typical behaviors, control
    of the autonomic nervous system and pituitary

37
The Basal Ganglia
  • The basal ganglia are a collection of subcortical
    nuclei that lie just under the anterior aspect of
    the lateral ventricles
  • Ganglia is a misnomer (term refers to
    collections of cell bodies in periphery)
  • Basal ganglia consist of the caudate nucleus, the
    putamen and the globus pallidus
  • Input to the basal ganglia is from the primary
    motor cortex and the substantia nigra
  • Output of the basal ganglia is to
  • Primary motor cortex, supplemental motor area,
    premotor cortex
  • Brainstem motor nuclei (ventromedial pathways)

38
Degenerative Disorders
  • Certain diseases produce loss of brain neurons
  • Parkinsons disease loss of dopamine neurons
  • Huntingtons Chorea loss of GABA/ACh
  • Alzheimers disease loss of ACh neurons

39
Mesencephalon
  • The mesencephalon (midbrain) consists of
  • Tectum is the dorsal portion of midbrain
  • Superior and inferior colliculi are involved in
    the visual and auditory systems
  • Tegmentum is that portion of the midbrain located
    under the tectum and consists of the
  • Rostral end of the reticular formation
  • Periaqueductal gray
  • Red nucleus
  • Substantia nigra (projects to striatum)
  • Ventral tegmental area (part of
  • reward circuit)

40
Metencephalon
  • Metencephalon consists of the
  • Pons
  • Contains the core of the reticular formation
  • The pons is involved in the control of sleep and
    arousal
  • Cerebellum is involved in motor control

41
Neural Control of REM Sleep
  • The pons is important for the control of REM
    sleep
  • PGO waves are the first predictor of REM sleep
  • ACh neurons in the peribrachial pons modulate REM
    sleep
  • Increased ACh increases REM sleep
  • Peribrachial neurons fire at a high rate during
    REM sleep
  • Peribrachial lesions reduce REM sleep
  • Pontine ACh neurons project to the thalamus
    (control of cortical arousal), to the basal
    forebrain (arousal and desynchrony), and to the
    tectum (rapid eye movements)
  • Pontine cells project via magnocellular cells
    within medulla to the spinal cord release
    glycine to inhibit alpha-motoneurons (induce REM
    motor paralysis or atonia)

42
Sleep and Neurotransmitters
  • Sleep function is altered by
  • Norepinephrine (arousal)
  • Serotonin (promotes sleep)
  • Dopamine (arousal)
  • Acetylcholine (in cortex arousal)
  • Histamine (arousal)
  • GABA (promotes sleep)
  • Opioid/opiates (promote sleep)

43
Myelencephalon
  • The myelencephalon consists of the
  • Medulla oblongata
  • The medulla is the most caudal portion of brain
    and is rostral to the spinal cord
  • The medulla contains part of the reticular
    formation
  • The nuclei of the medulla control vital functions
    such as regulation of the cardiovascular system,
    breathing, and skeletal muscle tone
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