Title: Brain Transplant: 1992 NOVA Documentary
1Brain Transplant1992 NOVA Documentary
2List of Methods
- Behavioral
- Various tests of motor function - pupillary
reflex, walking, sitting, standing, talking,
finger touching, balance (from a push), blinking
(tap of forehead), rigidity (movement of wrist or
limb) -
- Nervous system
- L-DOPA and other drug treatments (e.g.,
neuroprotection) - Chemical identification of MPTP
- Adrenal tissue to brain transplant
- Animal model of PD using MPTP
- Nerve graft tissue transplant in monkeys and
humans - Dissecting fresh fetal nerve cells from
substantia nigra - Stereotaxic surgery
- intracerebral injection of fresh tissue
suspension - into caudate and putamen (striatum)
- postoperative care (baseball game)
- immunosuppression therapy
- PET scan of flora-dopa uptake in striatum and
- Estimation of percentage of graft secreting
dopamine
3Follow-up questions
- Given that it took George and Juanita two years
to show miraculous recovery, what was the status
of Connie at this time point following surgery? - Are there any more recent reports of her
progress, or lack thereof? - What is her present condition?
- Why didnt NOVA report on her progress as
promised in the documentary?
4(No Transcript)
5JOURNEY OUT OF HOPELESSNESS GREENFIELD WOMAN
THANKS READERS WHOSE DONATIONS RESTORED HER
HUMANITY from PARKINSN Archives Sun, 28 May
1995
- Langston, the renowned Parkinson's disease
scientist, described the essence of Connie's
improvement this way - ''What makes you human is the ability to
interact with other humans. If you lose that, and
Connie had, you lose the essence of life. It
takes away what makes you a person. Connie is
still very disabled, but she has regained her
humanity. She is no longer a statue in the
corner.''
6Local news report from 1995, a year after
Connies transplantWriter Jim Trotter at the
Mercury News
- Two years ago, when I drove down with Langston
from the Parkinson's Institute to visit Connie in
Greenfield, the scene was far different.
Sophisticated computer testing indicated that she
was still cognitive, that her brain comprehended,
beyond the frozen mask. But even with the aid of
elaborate computer switches, she couldn't
communicate. - Now she is a smiling human being who can walk a
bit and respond to questions. Surgery to reattach
her ankle ligaments will greatly enhance her
mobility. But Langston said overcoming language
''ignition failure'' -- the inability to talk
spontaneously in expressing one's thoughts --
will take more time. ''But when that happens,
she will really be back,'' he said. - I could not resist sitting down next to Connie
and telling her how much I admired her courage.
She turned her eyes and said, ''Thank you.''
Don't give up, I said. Painstakingly, but
clearly, she responded. ''I won't.''
7Symptoms of PD
- 1) resting tremor (rhythmic shaking of an
extremity), - 2) slowness of movement (hypokinesia or
bradykinesia) - movements take much longer to
execute and there is also a general lack of
movement (akinesia), - 3) cogwheel rigidity (arms and legs become stiff
with a ratchet or jerky quality of movement -
almost no other disease produces this symptom), - 4) slow shuffling gait, short steps with the
patient bent or flexed over (very characteristic
of PD) and - 5) loss of facial expression and lack of
spontaneous blinking which gives the appearance
staring.
8L-DOPA treatment
Reversed symptoms but the therapeutic window
closed as severe side effects set in
hallucinations, dyskinesia, and uncontrollable
movement
9Parkinsons disease is not caused by transient
exposure to MPTP
That is, only f you use a strict neurobiological
marker as the criterion. The similarities in
behavioral changes suggests strongly that MPTP
exposure replicates virtually all the behavioral
symptoms of PD.
10Radiolabeled FD uptake in the striatum
Normal
PD
PD reduced uptake in the putamen MPTP
uniform reductions in both the caudate nucleus
and putamen
Moderate MPTP
Severe MPTP
11NIH-sponsored placebo controlled trials
12Winkler et al, 2005
- Figure 1. Functional recovery after neural
transplantation in Parkinsons disease (PD).
Recovery is suggested to occur in two phases
phase one is characterized by functional changes
limited to the striatum, whereas in phase two
changes of cortical activation can also be
detected.
13Winkler et al, 2005
- Figure 2. Allografts of fetal dopaminergic
neurons are accompanied by a delayed immune/
inflammatory response, which could affect
long-term survival and functional efficacy of the
transplanted dopaminergic neurons.
14variability in individual outcomes in the open
label studies suggest that other factors might
contribute to the success of the treatment.
- preparation and composition of the graft tissue -
prolonged cold storage and use of solid grafts
are not as good - selection of patients - older patients do not
tend to benefit as much as young patients due to
less confined damage and reduced ability to
accept to graft - pre-graft medication low-dose patients tend to
benefit more from graft. In fact, one of the
controlled studies with older patients with no
significant group improvement there was a
correlation between the magnitude of the response
to dose of L-dopa and the magnitude of the
postsurgical improvement. - graft placement grafts only innervate tissue
2-3 mm from the graft site so benefits will
depend on the location of the placement and
whether there is limited damage outside of the
striatum. - The authors conclude that standardized
procedures for selection of patients, graft
preparation and immunosuppresion, combined with
tailoring the placement of grafts may improve the
outcome of this promising therapy for PD.
15MPTP exposure initiates long-term
neurodegeneration
16Practice questions
- Where was the fetal tissue taken from and where
was it transplanted to? - Immunosuppresion is important for post-surgical
improvement to occur in the first 6 months or
after that time. - What was shown to be a misconception regarding
MPTP exposure and why? - What data suggests that MPTP does not induce PD?
-
17Hubel and Wiesel
18Receptive fields of visual neurons
- Neurons from all levels of the retina-geniculate-s
triate pathway - Receptive fields of foveal area were smaller than
those from the periphery (high-acuity) - Receptive fields were circular
- Receptive fields were monocular
- Receptive fields had excitatory and inhibitory
areas separated by a circular boundary - on firing when light was turned on
- off firing inhibition when light was on
followed by a burst of activity when it was
turned off
19Receptive fields
- On-center cell
- Off-center cell
- Both respond best to contrast
20Lower Layer IV neurons
- on or off center-surround receptive fields.
- M-layer projections terminate just above P-layer
projections - Monocular
21Simple cortical cells
- Neurons from lower layer IV of striate cortex are
exceptions compared to all other striate neurons,
which are categorized as simple or complex - Simple cells
- Have on and off regions
- Are monocular
- Borders of on and off regions are straight
lines rather than circles (rectangular receptive
fields) - Respond best when its preferred straight edge is
in a particular orientation and position
22Complex cortical cells
- Are more numerous
- Have rectangular receptive fields
- Respond best to straight line stimuli in a
specific orientation - Unresponsive to diffuse light
- Differ from simple cells in 3 important ways
- Larger receptive fields
- No on-off regions responds best to a straight
edge stimulus of a particular orientation swept
across the receptive field (fires continuously) - Many complex cells are binocular (respond to
stimulation of either eye and will respond more
robustly to stimulation of both eyes
simultaneously).
23Receptive Fields in Striate Cortex
- SIMPLE
- Rectangular
- on and off regions, like cells in layer IV
- Orientation and location sensitive
- All are monocular
- COMPLEX
- Rectangular
- Larger receptive fields
- Do not have static on and off regions
- Not location sensitive
- Motion sensitive
- Many are binocular
24Characteristics of complex cells
- Respond best to straight-line stimuli
- Of a particular orientation
- swept across the receptive field
- in a particular direction
- Receptive fields of binocular complex cells
- Occupy corresponding positions within the visual
fields of both eyes - Have the same straight-line orientation preference
25Binocular complex cells
- fire more robustly when both eyes are stimulated
simultaneously - respond best when the preferred straight-line
stimulus falls on slightly different positions of
the two retinas Retinal disparity - respond more robustly to stimulation of one eye
than to the same stimulation of the other eye -
Ocular dominance
26Binocular cell
http//www.physiology.wisc.edu/yin/public/hubel_wi
esel_binocular_cell.asf
- Mapping the receptive field of a complex
binocular cell in primary visual (striate) cortex.
27Columnar organization of V1
Vertical electrode tract
Horizontal electrode tract
28Hubel Wieselsmodel of the columnar
organization of the primary visual cortex
- Big block of tissue analyzes signals from one
area of the visual field - Sub-blocks analyze signals from the left and
right eyes - Slices of block prefer lines in a particular
orientation
29Component theory of color vision
- Three kinds of color receptors (cones) each with
a different spectral sensitivity - Color of a particular stimulus is determined by
the ratio of activity in the three kinds of
receptors
30Component theory of color vision
- The evidence
- Any color in the visible spectrum can be matched
by mixing together 3 different wavelengths of
light in different proportions. - 3 types of receptors must exist to match all the
colors in the visible spectrum
31Opponent-process theory of color vision
- Two different classes of cells in the visual
system for encoding color - One class of cells signaled red by changing its
activity in one direction and green by changing
its activity in the opposite direction - Another class signaled blue and its complement,
yellow.
32Opponent-process theory of color vision
- The evidence
- Complementary colors cannot exist together (no
reddish green or bluish yellow) - afterimage of red is green and the afterimage of
blue is yellow
33Afterimage demo
- Stare at fixation point for 1 minute
quickly shift gaze to the point below
X
X
34Which theory is correct?
- The Answer both (and a third one)
- Cones code color on a purely component basis
(different photopigments maximally sensitive to
low, medium and high wavelengths of light) - Opponent processing of color occurs at all other
levels of the retina-geniculate-striate system
35Component theory of color vision
- Microspectrophotometry - a technique for
measuring the absorption spectrum of the
photopigments contained in a single cone
Confirmed the existence of 3 different kinds of
cones, each containing a different photo-pigment
with different characteristic absorption spectrums
36Retinex theory of color vision
- Color is determined by reflectance the
proportion of light of different wavelengths a
surface reflects - Reflected light changes based on different
illumination - The efficiency of light absorbed and reflected by
a surface is constant. - The visual system compares the light reflected by
adjacent surfaces in at least 3 different
wavelength bands.
37Reflectance and Color Constancy
Incandescent Light
Fluorescent Light
A
C
A
C
B
B
D
G
F
I
E
H
A
A
B
B
C
C
Wavelengths absorbed A, B C Wavelengths
reflected D, E F
Wavelengths absorbed A, B C Wavelengths
reflected G, H I
38Land (1977) experiment
- Subjects adjusted the intensity of each
projector to produce a pure white light in a dark
room - Subjects were then shown Mondrians (Blue was
adjusted to reflect the same combinations of
wavelengths just judged to be white) - Despite the adjustment, blue still appeared as
blue in the Mondrian - However, when viewed in isolation in a dark
field it appeared as white
39Principles of sensory system organization
- Three different types of sensory cortex
- Primary sensory cortex receives most of its
input from thalamic relays - Secondary sensory cortex receives most of its
input from the primary sensory cortex of a system - Association cortex receives input from more
than one sensory system
40Visual areas of the cortex
41Scotoma
Perimetry test determines the area of blindness
in the visual field of each eye. Hemianopsia
scotoma covering half the visual field of both
eyes
Karl Lashleys scotoma experienced during a
migraine
42Two Visual Streams
43Two Visual streams Two theories
- What versus Where (Ungerleider Mishkin,
1982) kinds of information processed - Ventral pathway perception of what an object is
- Dorsal pathway perception of where the object
is located
44Two Visual streams Two theories
- What versus How (Milner Goodale, 1993)
the use to which information is put. - Ventral pathway conscious perception of objects
- Dorsal pathway direct behavioral interactions
with objects
45Visual agnosia
- Gnosis means to know
- Visual agnosics can see stimuli but do not know
what they are - Movement agnosia
- Object agnosia
- Color agnosia
- Prosopagnosia (faces)
46Prosopagnosia
- Can recognize faces as faces but cannot idenify
particular faces, including their own - The farmer and bird watcher
- General problem recognizing specific objects that
belong to complex classes of objects - Due to damage to the fusiform face area (border
between visual occipital and temporal areas)
47FFA