T3L8 anxiety neurobiology Flashcards

1
Q

amygdala and fear

A
  • divisions and connections within involved with emotion

- lesions can stop fear of specific things: eg unilateral amygdala removal stops spider phobia

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2
Q

stress response

A
  • from fearful stimuli
  • depends on HPA axis - hypothalamus, pituitary and adrenal cortex

hypothalamus releases CRH
pituitary releases ACTH
adrenal releases cortisol (stress hormone)

locus coeruleus releases noradrenaline
- fight or flight

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3
Q

push pull regulation of HPA axis

A

s8

hippocampus gives -ve feedback to reduce cortisol

amygdala makes you stressed

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4
Q

chronic stress

A

activation of glucocorticoid receptors in hippocampus

  • increase Ca2+ entry into neurons
  • increase Ca2+ > excitotoxic> cell death

as hippocampus cant limit cortisol production

anxiety may result from:

  • diminished hippocampal activity
  • loss of amygdala feedback
  • inappropriate fear
  • hippocampal size decrease in ptsd
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5
Q

hm

A
both hippocampus and amygdala have access to highly processed info from other brain areas
- eg diffuse modulatory systems
- noradrenergic system
- serotonergic system
(the 2 balance each other)
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6
Q

panic disorder

A

Characterized by unrealistic, unfounded fear and anxiety; acute and unremitting terror for variable lengths of time

treated with benzos- agonise GABAa receptor eg diazepam

or SSRI

or cognitive therapy

  • noradrenaline makes you alert
  • serotonin inhibits noradrenaline
    opposing functions (eg in amygdala, hippocampus)
  • shifted balance between these 2 linked to panic disorder- fear response to inappropriate stimuli

SSRIs increase 5HT response, inhibit noradrenaline, push balance back

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7
Q

benzos work for

A
  • GAD generalised anxiety disorder
  • panic

not for:

  • OCD
  • PTSD
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8
Q

SSRIs work for

A
  • OCD
  • PTSD
  • PD
  • GAD
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9
Q

Busprirone works for

A

GAD

6-HT receptor partial agonist

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10
Q

serotonergic system and anxiety

A

SSRIs

buspirone
5HT partial agonist

action of SSRIs is to do with receptors rather than gap junction so effects take a week or so to come on

its the adaptive changes of ns to chronically high serotonin levels

cascade of serotonin can lead to changes in plasticity and morphology of neurons
- this could aid reversal of stress induced changes may restore normal function to brain
s22

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11
Q

OCD

A

Frequently recurring, uncontrollable, anxiety-producing thoughts (obsessions) and impulses (compulsions). Responding to them, e.g. repeated, compulsive hand washing, dissipates associated anxiety

  • patients recognise that their thought and behaviours are irrational
  • 1-2%
  • genetic (common underlying genotype for OCD and Tourette’s)
  • environmental - eg stressful life events, strep infection
  • imbalance of direct and indirect pathways

theory 1:

  • the direct pathway is previously learned behavioural sequences- they can be automatic and rapidly executed
  • the indirect pathway suppresses these automatic behaviours, allowing the person switch to adaptive behaviours
  • overactivity of direct pathway means the indirect pathway cannot switch it off

theory 2:

  • caudate sends inhibitory projections to globus pallidus which sends inhibition to thalamus which projects to orbitofrontal cortex
  • OCD may be disinhibition leading to reverberation in this circuit
  • treat with SSRI (delayed onset), benzos (immediate)
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