Biologic and Related Sciences Flashcards

1
Q

This is the primary metabolite of dopamine and is usually assessed when examining dopamine activity in the CNS/spinal fluid/blood/urine

A

Homovanillic acid

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2
Q

What part of the MSE is used to test for diffuse cortical degeneration?

A

3-step-command. Tests for ideational apraxia (inability to put a sequence of skilled acts together in a row, though the individual may be able to do each separate task)

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3
Q

___________ refers to an immobile position that is consistently maintained.

A

Catalepsy

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4
Q

_______ is a resistance to any and all attempts to have the patient move or allow himself to be moved, despite no obvious motive for resistance.

A

Negativism

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5
Q

Where is episodic memory sited?

A

medial temporal lobes, anterior thalamic nucleus, mammillary body, fornix, and prefrontal cortex

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6
Q

Where is the site of semantic memory?

A

inferolateral temporal lobes

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7
Q

Where is the site of procedural memory?

A

basal ganglia, cerebellum, supplementary motor area

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8
Q

What receptor is the target of the antimigraine drug sumatriptain?

A

Serotonin 5-HT1D

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9
Q

What receptor is the target of atypical antipsychotics?

A

D2 dopamine (more d4 than typical antipsychotics) and Serotonin 5-HT6, 5ht2a

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10
Q

What serotonin receptor is implicated in the regulation of circadian rhythms?

A

5-HT7

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11
Q

Which serotonin receptor has anxiolytic properties?

A

5-HT1A

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12
Q

_____________ is the inability to integrate a visual scene to perceive it as a whole

A

Simultagnosia

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13
Q

Gertsmann syndrome:

A

agraphia, acalculia, right-left disorientation, finger agnosia (due to lesions of dominant hemisphere of parietal lobe)

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14
Q

What is prospagnosia thought to be due to?

A

disconnection of left inferior temporal cortices from the visual association area in the left parietal lobe

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15
Q

Balint syndrome (bilateral parieto-occipital lesions)

A

triad of optic ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, and simultanagnosia

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16
Q

Anton syndrome

A

failure to acknowledge blindness (bilateral occipital lobe lesions)

17
Q

Associative visual agnosia

A

inability to name or use objects despite the ability to draw them (bilateral medial occipitotemporal lesions)

18
Q

Most cases of hereditary Alzheimer disease occurring between the ages of 40 and 50 is due to problems with which gene?

A

presinilin 1

Note: presinilin 2 and B-APP are responsible for cases AFTER 50

19
Q

What stage of sleep due you see: increase in BP and HR, penile erection, dreaming?

A

all are REM!!

20
Q

Dysfunction of which area of the brain causes disinhibition, irritability, lability, euphoria, and lack of remorse?

A

orbitofrontal area (these features are reminiscent of antisocial personality disorder, intermittent explosive disorder, and episodic dyscontrol syndrome)

21
Q

Lesions in the _________ area of the brain lead to deficiencies of planning, monitoring, flexibility, and motivation. They appear inattentive nad undermotivated, cannot plan novel cognitive activity, and exhibit a tendency to linger on trivial thoughts.

A

dorsolateral

22
Q

On an MRI, what is different between what the finding of “periventricular patches of increased signal intensity” and “patches of increased signal in the white matter, not just periventricular in location” suggest?

A

periventricular patches = multiple sclerosis (these are the MS plaques)

white matter increased signal, not just periventricular = vascular dementia

23
Q

Put alpha, beta, delta, theta waves in order from lowest ot highest frequency.

A

delta (3.5-4zHz), theta (4 to 7 Hz), alpha (8 to 13 Hz), beta (13 to 30 Hz)