Schizophrenia- Dopamine Hypothesis (Biological explanation) (copy)

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1
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How was the link between dopamine and schizophrenia stablished?

  • 1950s

  • Parkinson’s disease

  • L-dopa — increased dopamine in brain (to treat tremors)

  • Patients developed symptoms similar to schizophrenia

2
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What three important things were found?

  • Delay, Deniker & Harl - 1952 - discovered antipsychotic drugs

  • Carlson & Lindqvist - 1963 - realised the drugs metabolised dopamine

  • Amphetamine could induce symptoms and reserpine could block dopamine reuptake — Griffin et al - 1968

3
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Dopamine receptor sites

  • 1970s

  • D1-D5 acknowledged

  • At first, D2 was given more importance - found in a large amount of volume - most impacted by antipsychotics - (in striatum)

  • Later on, D1 was also found to be important - presence in prefrontal cortex

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What did the amount of D1 and D2 mean and where in the brain where they found?

Who proposes this idea? When?

  • Fewer D1 (in prefrontal cortex)= negative symptoms

  • Higher D2 (in striatal areas)= positive symptoms

  • Proposed by Davis et al - 1991

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What did Owen find?

  • Excess receptor sites in left amygdala, which plays a primary role in the processing of memory and emotional reactions

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What did Falkai find?

  • Increased dopamine in the striatal areas such as the caudate nucleus and putamen

7
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Mesolimbic pathway

  • Carries dopamine from VTA to nucleus accumbens

  • too much dopamine from neurons that fire too quickly/too often cause hyperfunction and result in positive symptoms

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Mesocortical pathway

  • Carries dopamine from VTA to frontal lobe

  • too little dopamine in D1 receptors of the frontal lobe cause hypofunction and result in negative symptoms

9
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What did Frankle and Laurelle do?

  • 2002

  • Imaging studies

  • Confirmed that striatal dopamine is elevated in patients with schizophrenia

  • Blocking dopamine release or blocking postsynaptic receptors leads to a reduction of the psychotic symptoms for most patients

10
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Human Genome Project

  • Successfully mapped every gene in human DNA

  • Four of the the top ten genes are directly involved with dopamine activity

  • Talkowski et al - 2008