Lecture 22 - Developmental & Recovery of Function Flashcards

1
Q

What is FAS

A
  • Microcephaly
  • Tissue loss.
  • Cerebral dysgenesis.
  • Abnormalities of glial and neuronal migration.
  • Holoprosencephaly. (brain can’t develop into two hemispheres properly)
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2
Q

neural mass development

A
  • Neonatal brain weighs about 350 grams.
  • By adulthood, this weight has increased to around 1200 to 1400 grams.
  • By the age of 2 years, brain has reached 75% of its adult weight.
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3
Q

why ‘free play’, unstructured is so beneficial

A

•Because it specifically requires PFC functions like reasoning and imagination.

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4
Q

First 1000 days

A
  • Pregnancy àTwo Years old.
  • “The brain’s window of opportunity”
  • Most critical time for neural development
  • Good attachment
  • Good toys
  • Period of highest brain plasticity
  • Considered to be crucial in laying foundations of optimum health, growth, and neurodevelopment across the lifespan.
  • Period of highest plasticity.
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5
Q

the brain the first 1000 days

A
  • The human brain at 5 months post-conception is a smooth, bi-lobed structure.
  • By 9 months, i.e. term birth, it has gyri and sulci indicative of significant complexity, looking far more like the walnut-like adult brain.
  • At birth, rapidly developing brain areas include the hippocampus and the visual and auditory cortices.
  • Characterized by rapid rates of neuronal proliferation, growth and differentiation, myelination, and synaptogenesis.
  • Different regions and processes of the brain exhibit growth trajectories that span and peak at different times during these 1000 days.

First postnatal year:

•Rapid growth of the language processing areas as well as early development of the PFC that will control “higher processing” such as attention, inhibition, and flexibility.

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6
Q

Baby/Toddler brain devel

A
  • Prenatal – All five senses begin to function before birth.
  • 2-6 months– Significant ‘wiring’ of the brain occurs in the first months of a child’s life.
  • 6-9 months – By nine months brain has already undergone a rapid growth spurt that helps form connections between what they see, hear, feel and taste.
  • 3 years –By three years of age, a child’s brain has around 1000 trillion synapses.
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7
Q

brain dev 3-5 years/adolescence

A
  • 3-5years – Child’s brain development is built upon the now solid foundation created in the first five years.
  • Adolescence – When adolescence is reached, synapses will number around 500 trillion(half), a figure that remains relatively steady into adulthood.
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8
Q

Neuronal Migration

A
  • Method by which neurons travel from their origin or birthplace to their final position in the brain.
  • Migration during development brings different classes of neurons together so that they can interact appropriately.
  • Involves three distinct phases: extension of the leading process, movement of the cell body, and retraction of the trailing process.

they move like a caterpillar

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9
Q

Exuberant synaptogenesis:

A

•Explosion of synapse formation during early brain development.

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10
Q

Synaptic Pruning

A
  • Up to two years: a steady increase in the synapses in the brain.
  • After this period of rapid proliferation, connections are reduced through a process called pruning, so that brain circuits become more efficient.
  • Connections proliferate and prune in a prescribed order, with later, more complex brain circuits built upon earlier, simpler circuits.
  • By adulthood, 50% of these synapses have been shed (or “shit” in New Zealand)
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11
Q

Kennard Principle:

A
  • The earlier in life a brain lesion occurs, the more likely it is for some compensation mechanism to reverse at least some of the lesion’s negative effects.
  • “the younger the kid, the better the recovery”
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12
Q

Theories of Recovery of Function

  • Artifact Theory
  • Anatomical Reorganization Theory
  • Functional Adaptation Theory
A
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13
Q

Artifact Theory

A

•Claims that function is not really lost, just temporarily suppressed or impaired.

  • Consider a person with a TBI as just being “suppressed” in being able to perform a particular behavior.
  • Hopeful, but not overly realistic. Ex, HM will never get some function back
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14
Q

Anatomical Reorganization Theory

A
  • Claims that after brain injury, other areas of the brain take over the functions of the areas that have been damaged.
  • More in line with the research
  • We see this in movement (phantom limb), language, girl with half a brain

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15
Q

Functional Adaptation

A

•Refers to the ability of the person to relearn, through other means that those originally employed, behaviors that were lost in the damage.

  • This relearning is then capable of enhancing the reorganization of the nervous system.
  • Behaviour and practice can reactivate/activate brain areas/restructure

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16
Q

Boosting Neuroprotection

A
  • Intermittent fasting: increases synaptic adaptation, promotes neuron growth, improve overall cognitive function, and decreases the risk of neurodegenerative disease.
  • Traveling: exposes your brain to novel stimuli and new environments, opening up new pathways and activity in the brain.
  • Using mnemonic devices: memory training can enhance connectivity in the prefrontal parietal network and prevent some age-related memory loss.
  • Learning a musical instrument: may increase connectivity between brain regions and help form new neural networks.
  • Non-dominant hand exercises: can form new neural pathways and strengthen the connectivity between neurons.
  • Reading fiction: increases and enhances connectivity in the brain.
  • Expanding your vocabulary: activates the visual and auditory processes as well as memory processing.
  • Creating artwork: enhances the connectivity of the brain at rest (the “default mode network” or DMN), which can boost introspection, memory, empathy, attention, and focus.
  • Dancing: reduces the risk of Alzheimer’s and increases neural connectivity.
  • Sleeping: encourages learning retention through the growth of the dendritic spines that act as connections between neurons and help transfer information across cells (Nguyen, 2016).