Basal Pt 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is Huntington’s chorea? Where is the lesion? Is it inheritable?

A

involuntary jerky movements of face, tongue & limbs due to lesion of striatum & cortex
underactivity of indirect path facilitates direct path
loss of striatal GABA neurons that project to GP
Autosomal dominant, chromosome 4

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2
Q

What is athetosis?

A

writhing movement of limbs

loss of striatal GABA neurons seen in chorea

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3
Q

What is hemiballismus?

A

flailing of limbs

lesion of subtahalmus (virus) reduces inhibitory control over thalamus & cortical output

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4
Q

Parkinson’s disease is a deficiency of what?

A

dopamine!

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5
Q

What does Parkinson’s result in? It is degeneration of what? What is the tx, what can excess cause?

A

rests tremor, rigidity, inability to switch strategies, bradykinesia
degeneration of pigemented dopaminergic neurons in SNc
Tx= enhance DA levels or Rx that acts as DA antagonist
excess can cause schizophrenic-like symptoms

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6
Q

In Parkinson’s reduced DA projects to what two things and what does it cause in each?

A
dorsal striatum (caudate & putamen): involuntary movements
ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens): bradykinesia, cognitive dysfunctions
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7
Q

Where do basal ganglia also project to outside of the GP-thalamus-cortex loops?

A

onto motor control centers in reticular formation (pedunculopontine nucleus)

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8
Q

GPi/substantia nigra reticulata–> ? –> ?

Is this pathways largely activating or inhibiting?

A

reticular formation–> flexor/extensor muscles

largely inhibiting

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9
Q

Extrapyramidal basal ganglia projections are affected by what? What do you get loss of and what does this cause?

A

PD= extrapyramidal disorder

loss of DA regulation= GPi/SNr has less dampening effect on reticular formation

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10
Q

With PD (parkinson’s) the reticulospinal tract is _______ which manifests inappropriate levels of _____ such as _____ muscle tremor & tension

A

less regulated; tonic activity; increased

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11
Q

What is the net effect of Parkinson’s and decreased DA levels on indirect and direct pathways actions of the GPi neurons?

A

dysregulation of indirect & direct pathway actions on GPi neurons= altered thalamo-cortical activity & behavior= tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity

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12
Q

PD pts have less ____ & rely more on ____ cues from _____ cortices for action initiating actions

A

DA; external; sensory

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13
Q

Post mortem studies show what?

A

greatest degeneration of DA projection system affects putamen area

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14
Q

In some cases where does DA degeneration begin and where does it progress to?

A

begins w/part of caudate in executive loop & extends to motivational loop

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15
Q

What are motor dysfunctions in PD initially? What can this initially be overridden by?

A

faulty executive decisions w/diminished ability to produce internally cued actions
can be overridden by visual loop (kinesia paradoxa) in early stages

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16
Q

Drug addiction is reinforced via what system?

A

mesolimbic DA system?

17
Q

What four drugs transiently enhance DA levels in accumbens? And how do they do this?

A

amphetamine, cocaine, heroine & nicotine

either inhibit DA uptake or enhance its release

18
Q

What do opioids do?

A

facilitate DA release by inhibiting GABA inhibition of DA neurons in VT

19
Q

Nicotine stimulates what cells via what receptors?

A

VT DA cells via nicotinic cholinergic receptors

20
Q

Cocaine & amphetamine inhibit what?

A

DA uptake at synapses in n. accumbens

21
Q

DA release underlies what?

A

incentive learning & long term memories that contribute to craving

22
Q

Addiction is associated w/an imbalance b/w what two areas acting on the n. accumbens?

A

PFC & VTA

23
Q

Chronic drug & alcohol abuse is associated w/what?

A

hypofrontality: decrease in ability of vmPFC/OFC to inhibit accumbens which leads to behavioral disinhibition
enhanced activity of DA neurons in VTA= sensitization of responses to drugs & drug-related environmental stimuli

24
Q

What is the spiraling effect?

A

drug intake spreads to other CS loops & impacts them

25
Q

What are the loops impacted by the spiraling effect?

A

VTA DA neurons project to accumbens whose inhibitory neurons project onto substantia nigra these then innervate the dorsal striatum of executive & motor loops
addictive drugs active this loop to develop drug seeking habits (once dorsal striatum is recruited)