S2W8 - Neuroplasticity Flashcards

1
Q

Ontogenetic Period

A

brain growth from birth to 6 yrs; characterised by synapse formation and pruning with glial call development

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2
Q

Extensive Flexibility

A

the significant plasticity in early brain development; e.g. the ability to have language function switch hemispheres

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3
Q

Meningiomas

A

tumor; encapsulated and (usually) benign tumor that grows between meninges layers

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4
Q

Metastatic

A

tumor; cancerous cells carried to the brain via the bloodstream; will diffuse and are dangerous, likely terminal

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5
Q

Haemorrhage

A

stroke; blood vessel/s rupture and blood leaks into the brain tissue (bad)

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6
Q

Aneurysm

A

can cause stroke; defective elasticity of blood vessel/s are at risk of rupture

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7
Q

Ischemia

A

stroke; blockage in blood vessel/s disrupting supply

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8
Q

Thrombosis

A

can cause stroke; blood clot

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9
Q

Embolism

A

stroke; thrombus moving from larger to smaller vessel, causing a blockage

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10
Q

Arteriosclerosis

A

can cause stroke; artery wall thickens and channels narrow

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11
Q

Contusions

A

TBI; bruised brain

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12
Q

Subdural Hematoma

A

TBI; blood collection b/w dura matter and arachnoid membrane

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13
Q

Mild TBI

A

concussion, but we gave it a new name cause people thought it was a one time thing to have a mini ~traumatic brain injury~

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14
Q

Encephalitis

A

infection; brain inflammation

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15
Q

Bacterial Encephalitis

A

infection; cerebral abscess puts pressure on the brain resulting in damage; can cure abscess but not damage done by the abscess

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16
Q

Bacterial Meningitis

A

infection; meninges inflammed; 30% fatal

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17
Q

Syphilis

A

infection; STI leads to dementia (general paresis)

18
Q

Viral Infections

A

infections (shocker); e.g. rabies (which likes neurons), fatal with a 30-day window for vaccine

19
Q

Mercury

A

neurotoxin; “mad as a hatter” due to mercury in hat factories

20
Q

Lead

A

neurotoxin; “crackpot” due to lead base in pots that would expose people when cracked

21
Q

Endogenous Neurotoxins

A

neurotoxin (shocker); created by the body, e.g. cortisol (stress hormone)

22
Q

Apoptosis

A

cell death (good); genetic “self-destruct” program over 1-2 days makes cells shrink then bleb (put dead parts into a vesicle)

23
Q

Necrosis

A

cell death (bad); fast and disordered death resulting from injury, which can spread to other cells

24
Q

Focal Seizure

A

epilepsy; doesn’t involve the entire brain; epileptic neurons fire together in the focussed region

25
Q

Tonic-Clonic Seizure

A

epilepsy (generalised, grand mal); involves entire brain; loss of consciousness, violent convulsions, tongue biting, hypoxia (lack of oxygen); typical hollywood seizure

26
Q

Absence Seizure

A

epilepsy (generalised, petit mal); involves entire brain; loss of consciousness, NO convulsions, ceases behaviour, stares into space; common in children and usually ceases at puberty

27
Q

Causes: Parkinson’s

A

substantia nigra degeneration, defficiency in dopamine production;
impacts 1-2% of people over 65;
treatments of L-dopa to implanted electrodes lose effectiveness over time

28
Q

Initial Symptoms: Parkinson’s

A

slight stiffness; tremor at rest

29
Q

Later Symptoms: Parkinson’s

A

muscular rigidity; marked tremor at rest; slowness of movement; mask-like face

30
Q

Causes: Multiple Sclerosis

A

attacks myelin of neurons in the CNS

31
Q

Initial Symptoms: Multiple Sclerosis

A

microscopic degredation of myelin sheaths

32
Q

Later Symptoms: Multiple Sclerosis

A

complete degeneration; non-functioning axon; scarring of neurons, leaving the sclera (brain scar tissue)

33
Q

Causes: Alzheimers

A

Amyloid plaques- scar tissue of degenerating neurons and beta-amyloid proteins in higher concentrations
Neurofibrillary tangles- tangles of Tau protein in cytoplasm
Neuron loss- brain shrinks;
Effects ~50mil people globally

34
Q

Preclinical Symptoms: Alzheimers

A

1st stage; pathological brain changes with no outward symptoms

35
Q

Predromal Symptoms: Alzheimers

A

2nd stage; mild cognitive impairment, anxiety, reduced autonomy

36
Q

Dementia Symptoms: Alzheimers

A

3rd stage; progressive memory loss, attention deficits, personality changes

37
Q

Neural Degeneration (Stages)

A
  1. Axotomy [axon cut]
  2. Anterograde Degradation [distal (axon of neuron) degenerates]
  3. Retrograde Degradation [proximal (cell body) degenerates]
  4. Transneural Degradation [neurons synapsed onto and synapsed by degraded neuron also degrade]
38
Q

Neural Regeneration

A

not in CNS;
PNS axon regrowth in 2-3 days after injury;
type of injury determines functionality of regeneration

39
Q

Collateral Sprouting

A

not in CNS;
adjacent healthy neurons sprout axons to take up the sites left by degenerated neurons’ synapses

40
Q

Neural Reorganisation

A

severing motor area from brain region results in the surrounding motor areas and/ or brain regions to utilise those neurons and their connections;
its free real estate

41
Q

Cognitive Reserve

A

the ability to regain function due to education and intelligence rather than neural reorganisation;
better outcomes for younger, higher IQ, more educated, and/ or wealthier people

42
Q

Phantom Limbs

A

The sensation of amputated limbs as if they were still part of the body, as if its a ghost that haunts the amputee;
Ramachandran theorised this and created mirror box-therapy