Psychosis Pt 3 + LSD
Schizophrenia + Mary Juan Ah
Epilepsy Pt 1
Parkinson's Disease
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)
100

-Quetiapine

-Olanzapine + SSRIs

-Aripiprazole

What are some common atypical antipsychotics used to treat bipolar disorder?

100

2 positive symptoms of schizophrenia.

what is

-hallucinations

-delusions

100

Primarily motor, sensory symptoms. Typically no loss of consciousness.

What is a simple partial seizure?
100

2 motor symptoms of PD.

what is (2):

-tremor at rest

-bradykinesia

-akinesia

-rigidity

-shuffling gait

100

The 3 misconceptions of DID.

What is

1) DID is a fad

2) DID is primarily diagnosed in North America

3) DID is rare

200
3 acute effects of LSD.

what is (3):

-increased vividness of color

-movement of kaleidoscopic imagery 

-enhanced sensitivity to music

-altered sense of touch/texture

-synesthesia

200

The order of the schizophrenia spectrum, from least severe to most severe.

what is..

1) delusional disorder

2) brief psychotic disorder

3) schizophreniform disorder

4) schizophrenia

5) schizo affective disorder

200

The 4 etiologies of epilepsy.

what is

1) genetics

2) infection

3) injury

4) unknown 

200

The two common treatments of PD and an implication of each.

What is

1) L-Dopa 

-dyskinesia is major side effect with prolonged use

-wearing off phenomenon

2) deep brain stimulation

-seems to lose efficacy overtime

200

The key points of the Spanos thesis.

-argued DID is a social construct

-DID is form of role-playing between patients (seeking attention from therapist) and therapist (urge of discovery)

300

excessive goal/reward deactivation, leading to cluster of depressive symptoms, and decreased motivation, goal-setting, self-confidence

what is goal and reward nonattainment?
300

3 chronic psychological effects of daily high potency use of cannabis.

what is

1) increased risk of psychosis in dose-dependent manner

2) earlier onset of psychosis

3) CBD leads to behavioural responses in ppl with schizo similar to atypical antipsychotics 

300
The 4 common treatments of epilepsy.

WHAT IS

1) anticonvulsants

2) ketogenic diet

3) vagus nerve stimulation

4) surgical procedures for hard to treat epilepsy

300

The Michael J Fox Controversy.

What is

-was in ad for politician

-showed severe signs of dyskinesia

-politician on opposite spectrum accused Fox of faking or overexaggerating symptoms to increase impact of ad

-In reality, was displaying symptoms from taking too much L-dopa, a medication he was taking for his PD

300

2 structural changes evident in individuals with DID.

what is (2)

- smaller hippo

-smaller amy

-dec volume of parietal structures like posterior parietal cortex

-larger white matter tracts

400

these receptors is thought to be associated with thought disorder associated with LSD and the paranoid that appears later in the trip

what are dopamine type 1 and 2 receptors?

400

The 4 main theories/hypothesis of schizophrenia we learned in class.

What is

- Serotonin hypotheis

-Dopamine theory

-Glutamergic theory

-Immune dysfunction theory

400

The definition of an epileptic aura and 2 reasons why they are helpful.

what is

-a warning sensation that can occur before a focal seizure

-can warn person of impending seizure

-nature of aura can sometimes provide clues about where in the brain the seizure is starting

400

The major neuropathological hallmark of PD and PDD.

What is

-degeneration of neurons in the substantia nigra, decreasing dopamine levels

lewy bodies present, and in PDD 10x more lewy bodies in cortex than SN

400

The DSM-5 Criteria for DID.

What is

A) disruption of identity

-2+ distinct personality states

B) recurrent gaps in memory

-everyday events, important personal info, traumatic events

C) Distress and problems in everyday life

-work, relationships, other areas

D) Symptoms not normal cultural/religious practices

500

The 3 key points of the serotonin hypothesis of schizophrenia.

what is...

1) psychological effects of LSD, psilocybin/psilocin are mediated by 5-HT21 receptor

2) 5-HT2A receptor abnormalities evident in brains of schizo + at risk ppl

3) 5-HT2A antagonism known to contribute to effects of atypical antipsychotics

lmao

500

3 pieces of evidence supporting the dopamine theory of schizophrenia.

what is

1) brains of ppl w PD have marked dopamine depletion, and antipsychotic drugs produce symptoms similar to PD

2) drugs known to inc dopamine (ex. cocaine) produce symptoms of schizo

3) efficacy of antipsychotic drug is correlated with its ability to block activity at dopamine receptors 

500

2 pieces of evidence that astrocytes play a role in development of epilepsy.

What is (2)

- astrocytic functions compromised in epilepsy

-astrocytic functions contribute to pathological changes in synaptic transmission/hyperexcitability

-dysfunctional adenosine transmission linked to astrocytic pathophysiology in epilepsy

-astrocyte-mediated inflammation can promote epileptogenesis

500

The key points of the MPTP model of PD and why it is used mainly on primates only.

-MPTP specifically targets dopamine receptors

-MPTP converts into MPP+ which is taken up by dopamine receptor

-administered to primates because rodents are very resistant to MPTP

500

The 3 phases to the triphasic approach to treating DID.

Phase 1

-focus on symptom stabilization though teaching affect/impulse regulating skills

-communication/cooperation between dissociated states

Phase 2

-focus on slow step-wise processing of trauma that led to dissociation

Phase 3

-focus on integration of identities 

-reduction of dissociation as coping mechanism