Biological aspects of schizophrenia
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BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
- BY Dr.SRIRAM.R
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Genetic factors
Dopamine hypothesis and other biochemical factors
Brain structure
Associated factors – Birth complications/Viral
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GENETIC FACTORS
Prevalence of schizophrenia is the same all over the world (about 1%)Supports a biological view as prevalence does not vary with environmentThere are variations within broad geographical areas (e.g. Torrey 2002 – found high rates of Sz in Ireland (4%) Incidence is also high in Croatia and Scandinavian countries, but low in Spain and Italy and very low in some parts of Africa
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How do we study the influence of genetic factors?
Twin studies
Share the same genes and the same environment
However one is usually born bigger than the
other
Share as many genes as siblings but share the
same environment
However they might be treated
differently
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TWIN STUDIESGottesman and Shields reviewed the results of 5 twin studies looking for concordance rates for schizophrenia. These studies looked at 210 MZ twins and 319 DZ twins.It was found that in MZ twins there was a concordance rate of 35-58% compared with dizygotic (DZ) twin rates that ranged from 9-26%. They also found a concordance rate in MZ twins of 75-91% when the sample was restricted to the most severe form of schizophrenia. Cardno (2002) – showed concordance rate of 26.5% MZ and 0% for DZ
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Pitfalls
Twins are not representative of the wider population (gestational environment differs)
It is a very small sample. There are very few MZ twins in the population and only 1% are Sz.
Are these diagnosis made using the same criteria?
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The overall picture
This seems to indicate an influence of genetic factors but also the importance of environmental/ social factors
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Milder forms of schizophrenia CR is 17-33% (greater genetic loading with severe Sz) The twin studies have all assumed that the shared environmental effects for MZ and DZ twins are equal which may be incorrectThe finding of a higher rate of schizophrenia among the biological relatives of an adopted-away person who develops schizophrenia, as compared to the adoptive, nonbiological relatives who rear the patient, provides further support to the genetic contribution in the etiology of schizophrenia
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GENETICS - ADOPTION STUDIES
Tienari – 155 adopted children – whose biological mothers had schizophrenia –they had a concordance of 10% compared to 1% in adopted children without schizophrenic parents.
This is very strong evidence that genetics are a risk factor for schizophrenia
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Age of the father has a direct correlation with the development of schizophrenia. In studies of schizophrenic patients with no history of illness in either the maternal or paternal line, it was found that those born from fathers >60 years old were vulnerable to developing the disorder
All the evidence also suggests environmental triggers: Epigenetics could explain that the concordance rate is less than 100% in MZ twins
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GENETICSSeveral genes appear to make a contribution nine linkage sites: 1q, 5q, 6p, 6q, 8p, 10p, 13q, 15q, and 22qFurther analyses of these chromosomal sites have led to the identification of specific candidate genes, and the best current candidates are alpha-7 nicotinic receptor, DISC 1, GRM 3, COMT, NRG 1, RGS 4, and G 72
Dystrobrevin (DTNBP1) and neureglin 1
NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS
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DOPAMINE HYPOTHESIS
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The theory evolved from two observations. First, the efficacy and the potency of DRAs are due to antagonism of D2 receptorsSecond, cocaine and amphetamine (increase dopamine) are psychotomimetic
The basic theory does not elaborate on whether the dopaminergic hyperactivity is due to
too much release of dopamine, too many dopamine receptors, hypersensitivity of the dopamine receptors to dopamine, or a combination of these mechanisms
Mesocortical and Mesolimbic tracts are most often implicated
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Normal Level of Dopamine In The
Human Brain
Elevated Level of Dopamine In The Brain of a Schizophrenic Patient
(specifically the D2 receptor)
Neurons that use the transmitter ‘dopamine’ fire too often and transmit too many messages or too often.
Certain D2 receptors are known to play a key role in guiding attention.
Lowering DA activity helps remove the symptoms of schizophrenia
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Dopamine and PD
Parkinson’s sufferers have low levels of dopamine
L-dopa raises DA activity People with Parkinson's develop
schizophrenic symptoms if they take too much L-dopa
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• Evidence comes from – studies with drugs – post mortems – pet scans
Brain of schizophrenic patients produces more
dopamine than normal brains
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ROLE OF DRUGS• Amphetamines and cocaine lead to
increase in DA levels
• Large quantities lead to delusions and hallucinations
• If drugs are given to schizophrenic patients their symptoms get worse
• Drugs which block dopamine (Phenothiazines) also seem to reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia
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POST MORTEMS
• Falkai et al 1988Autopsies have found that people with
schizophrenia have a larger than usual number of dopamine receptors.
Increase of DA in brain structures and receptor density (left amygdala and caudate nucleus, putamen)
Concluded that DA production is abnormal for schizophrenia
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PET SCANS
• Lindstroem et al (1999)Radioactively labelled a chemical L-Dopa Administered to 10 patients with schizophrenia and 10 with no diagnosisL-Dopa taken up quicker with schizophrenic patients vs controlsSuggests they were producing more DA than the control group
• Increase in D2 receptors in the caudate nucleus of drug-free patients with schizophrenia
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OTHER BIOCHEMICAL FACTORS
Serotonin: Causes both +ve and –ve symptoms in Sz. Clozapine dec. +ve symptoms and has robust Serotonin antagonist activityNE : Neuronal degeneration in NE system may account for anhedonia. Akathisia in Schizoaffective disorder was found to be associated with increased levels of norepinephrine (Agronin and Maletta, 2006)GABA : loss of GABAergic neurons in hippocampus->dec. GABA->inc. dopaminergic activitySubstance P and neurotensin causing altered neuropeptide mechanisms
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Decreased muscarinic and nicotinic receptors in the caudate-putamen, hippocampus, and selected regions of the prefrontal cortex may directly impact cognition. There is also decreased muscarinic receptor in the STG responsible for auditory hallucinations in Sz (up to 48 per cent less muscarinic receptorsin the STG of schizophrenia brains than in healthy brains)
Source - http://www.schizophreniaresearch.org.au/category/research-news/2006-research-news/
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ROLE OF GLUTAMATEGlutamate has been implicated because ingestion of phencyclidine, a glutamate antagonist, produces an acute syndrome similar to schizophreniaThe hypotheses proposed about glutamate include those of hyperactivity, hypoactivity, and glutamate-induced neuro- toxicityAbnormally low levels of glutamate receptors are found in postmortem brains of people previously diagnosed with schizophrenia (Konradi and Heckers, 2003)
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Evaluation
The main problem with previous studies is that it is not found in all schizophrenics. This has lead to further research done by Crow in 1985.He suggested two types of schizophrenia with two biological causes.
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Two Syndrome Hypothesis - Crow 1985
Type one - genetically inherited associated with dopamine – characterised by positive symptoms.
Type Two – Neurodevelopmenal disorder – to do with Brain structure – characterised by negative symptoms.
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The loss of brain volume widely reported in schizophrenic brains appears to result from reduced density of the axons, dendrites, and synapses that mediate associative functions of the brainOne theory, based in part on the observation that patients often develop schizophrenic symptoms during adolescence, holds that schizophrenia results from excessive pruning of synapses during this phase of development.
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CEREBRAL VENTRICLES
Swayze (1990) reviewed 50 studies of schizophrenics and found that many had abnormally large amounts of liquid in the cavities of the brain. Suddath, who supports this found the same enlarged cavities when using MRI scans on schizophrenic twins. Beng-Choon Ho (2010) in a longitudinal correlational study of 211 schizophrenics found that antipsychotic drugs have measurable influence on brain tissue loss over time. This was supported by Lewis (2009) who administered antipsychotic drugs to primates and found a brain volume loss of 10% .
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Whether an active pathological process is continuing to evolve in schizophrenia patients is still uncertain. Some studies indicate progression, while others do not.
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Andreasen et 1990 – conducted a very well controlled CAT scan study and found significant enlargement of the ventricles in schizophrenics compared to controls.
However this was only the case for men and not for women. Therefore CANNOT generalise the findings to women.
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ASYMMETRY and LOBE FINDINGS
• There is a reduced symmetry in several brain areas in schizophrenia, including the temporal, frontal, and occipital lobes.
• This reduced symmetry is believed by some investigators to originate during fetal life and to be indicative of a disruption in brain lateralization during neurodevelopment.
• High density of white matter in the right frontal and parietal lobe.
• Small amount of grey matter in the temporal lobes.
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LIMBIC SYSTEMPM findings and MRI -> decrease in the size of the limbic system including the amygdala, the hippocampus, and the parahippocampal gyrusHippocampus is small, functionally abnormal and has disorganised neurons
Hippocampal pyramidal cell disarray in schizophrenia as a bilateral phenomenon. Arch Gen Psychiatric. 1991;48:415
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PREFRONTAL CORTEX
PM studies show anatomical abnormalities in the PFC.Functional deficits have also been demonstrated. It has long been noted that several symptoms of schizophrenia mimic those found in persons with prefrontal lobotomies or frontal lobe syndromes.
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THALAMUSVolume shrinkage or neuronal loss, in particular subnucleiThe medial dorsal nucleus of the thalamus, which has reciprocal connections with the prefrontal cortex, has been reported to contain a reduced number of neuronsNumber of neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes is reduced by 30 to 45 percent in schizophrenic patients
Photomicrographs of Nissl-stained frontal sections through the anterior (A), middle (B), and posterior (C) levels of the mediodorsal nucleus
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BASAL GANGLIA AND CEREBELLUMMany patients with schizophrenia show odd movements, even in the absence of medication-induced movement disordersExamples are akathisia, facial grimacing, stereotypiesThe movement disorders involving the basal ganglia (e.g., Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease) are the ones most commonly associated with psychosisIncrease in the number of D2 receptors in the caudate, the putamen, and the nucleus accumbens
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EYE MOVEMENT DYSFUNCTION
Decreased rate of blinkingStaringLack of the blink reflex in response to a tap on
the foreheadPoor visual pursuit movementsPoor pupil reactions to lightAbnormal eye movements in 50 to 85 percent of
patients with schizophrenia
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VIRAL CAUSESIn recent years, there has been a build up of evidence supporting the role of viral infections in the development of schizophrenia, including the poliovirus, the flu virus and encephalitis lethargica virusData supporting a viral hypothesis
increased number of physical anomalies at birth, an increased rate of pregnancy and birth complications, seasonality of birth consistent with viral infection, geographical clusters of adult cases, and seasonality of hospitalizations
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BIRTH-RELATED COMPLICATIONS
Complications during pregnancy, abnormal foetal growth and complications during delivery are significant risk factors in the development of schizophrenia. Those that play a significant role in the development of schizophrenia include: bleeding, diabetes and pre-eclampsia.
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Summary
Biological explanations do account for schizophrenia,
however the fact that there is no conclusive explanation that accounts for all schizophrenics – psychological explanations
need to be considered.
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REFERENCES
KAPLAN AND SADOCK SYNOPSIS OF PSYCHIATRYwww.schizophrenia.comVarious sources from the internet
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THANK YOU