SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 39
Biological explanations
of Schizophrenia
Assumptions of biological
explanations
 All mental disorders have a physical
  cause. (micro-organisms, genetics,
  biochemistry or neuroanatomy)
 Mental illnesses can be described in
  terms of clusters of symptoms.
 Symptoms can be identified, leading to
  the diagnosis of an illness.
 Diagnosis leads to appropriate physical
  treatments.
Schizophrenia: genetics
factors
Prevalence of schizophrenia is the same all over
the world (about 1%)
   Supports a biological view as prevalence
    does not vary with environment
   However, there are variations within broad
    geographical areas (e.g. Torrey 2002 –
    found high rates of Sz in Ireland, 4% of the
    population, the incidence is also high in
    Croatia and Scandinavian countries but low
    in Spain and Italy and very low in some
    parts of Africa)
How do we study the influence
                    Concordance rate:
of genetic factors? the proportion of
                                              pairs where both
      If the concordance rate is             individuals share a
     100% in MZ twins it means              certain characteristic.
       that the characteristic is
        genetically determined.
     If it less than the 100% but
      higher that DZ twins What
              does it mean?        Twin                However they
 However one                      studies                might be
  is usually                                             treated
 born bigger                                  Dizygotic differently
                   Monozygotic
than the other                                  twins
                       twins
                                              Share as
            Share the same                  many genes
             genes and the                   as siblings
                 same                        but share
              environment                     the same
                                            environment
Family                   Adoption
    studies                   studies


Children share 50%     If the adopted children
of their genes with          have a higher
    each of their       concordance rate for
 parents. If one of    Sz with their biological
   their parent is     parents than with their
 schizophrenic has     adoptive parents, does
   the child more            it support the
    chance to be         influence of genetic
 schizophrenic? If               factors?
 he/she is Sz, are
only genetic factors
    responsible?
Twin studies
 Gottesman and Shields ( reviewed the
  results of 5 twin studies looking for
  concordance rates for schizophrenia.
  These studies looked at 210 MZ twins and
  319 DZ twins
 It was found that in MZ twins there was a
  concordance rate of 35-58% compared
  with dizygotic (DZ) twin rates that ranged
  from 9-26%. They also found a
  concordance rate in MZ twins of 75-91%
  when the sample was restricted to the
  most severe form of schizophrenia.
 The milder forms of schizophrenia had
  concordance rates of 17-33% suggesting
  that there may be greater genetic loading
  with severe forms of schizophrenia. The
  twin studies have all assumed that the
  shared environmental effects for MZ and
  DZ twins are equal which may be incorrect

              Twins are not representative of the wider
               population. (gestational environment)

           It is a very small sample. There are very few MZ
              twins in the population and only 1% are Sz.

              Are these diagnosis made using the same
                              criteria?
Adoption studies
                   Prevalence            Prevalence
                   amongst               among
                   biological            adoptive
                   relatives             relatives
Kety et al               13%                    2%
(1968)
schizophrenia
only
Tienari et al            30%                    15%
(1994) all
‘severe’ psych.
diagnoses

          Could the psychiatrist making the diagnosis in the
        WereHowtheyweretheir biological theythatregularly?
        child Did influenced children when parents one offamily?
        Weretheyolddiagnosishe/she using the same adopted?
              be adopted by members of the were criteria?
               these see if made is aware extended both
                         of the parents are Sz??
The overall picture

              This seems to indicate an
              influence of genetic factors
              but also the importance of
              environmental/ social
              factors
So have we found a gene
responsible for Sz?
In 2006, an Edinburgh University team
found people carrying a variant of a gene
called neuregulin had a higher chance of
developing psychotic symptoms. However
since then research has shown that Sz
involves a huge number of genes with
each of them making only a small
contribution to the development of the
disorder according to Robin Murray a
leading schizophrenia researcher.
Risk rises with degree of genetic
 relatedness
  Spouse – 1% (same as general
   population)
  Child – 13%
  DZ twin – 17%
  MZ twin – 48%
Effect of shared environment?
 Substantial evidence for a genetic contribution
 Some evidence disputed:
  Shared environment issues
  Diagnostic criteria in adoption studies
  All the evidence also suggests
   environmental triggers: Epigenetics could
   explain that the concordance rate is less
   than 100% in MZ twinsHeritability is
    similar with other major disorders
    such as breast cancer, hypertension,
    etc
 How is schizophrenia inherited and what
  exactly is inherited?
DOPAMINE
HYPOTHESIS
Schizophrenia: Biochemical
 The dysfunction of several
  neurotransmitter systems
    Dopamine,
    5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT; Serotonin)
    Glutamate
 are thought to play a part in
  schizophrenia.

 We will concentrate on the Dopamine
  Hypothesis
Schizophrenia & dopamine
 The dopamine hypothesis:
   Schizophrenia is caused by
    excessive DA activity.
   This causes abnormal functioning
    of DA-dependent brain systems,
    resulting in schizophrenic
    symptoms
   DA can increase or decrease brain
    activity depending on the system
    you’re looking at
Lets remind ourselves how
neurotransmitters work
DOPAMINE
       HYPOTHESIS
The Dopamine hypothesis states that the
  brain of schizophrenic patients produces
  more dopamine than normal brains.
  –Evidence comes from
     –studies with drugs
     –post mortems
     –pet scans
Elevated Level of
       Normal Level of
                                      Dopamine In The Brain of a
       Dopamine In The
                                        Schizophrenic Patient
        Human Brain
                                      (specifically the D2 receptor)




 Neurons that use the transmitter ‘dopamine’ fire too often and
  transmit too many messages or too often.
 Certain D2 receptors are known to play a key role in guiding
  attention.
 Lowering DA activity helps remove the symptoms of
  schizophrenia
Parkinson’s disease
               Parkinson’s sufferers have low
                levels of dopamine
               L-dopa raises DA activity
               People with Parkinson's develop
                schizophrenic symptoms if they
                take too much L-dopa




Chlorphromazine (given to schizophrenics) reduces
the symptoms by blocking D2 receptors
ROLE OF DRUGS
–Amphetamines (agonists) lead to increase
in DA levels
–Large quantities lead to delusions and
hallucinations
–If drugs are given to schizophrenic patients
their symptoms get worse
POST MORTEM

Falkai et al 1988
 Autopsies have found that people with
  schizophrenia have a larger than usual
  number of dopamine receptors.
 Increase of DA in brain structures and
  receptor density (left amygdala and caudate
  nucleus putamen)
 Concluded that DA production is abnormal for
  schizophrenia
PET SCANS

Lindstroem et al (1999)
 Radioactively labelled a chemical L-
  Dopa
 administered to 10 patients with
  schizophrenia and 10 with no
  diagnosis
 L-Dopa taken up quicker with
  schizophrenic patients
 Suggests they were producing more
  DA than the control group
Which Came First?
                   The Chicken or the Egg?


    Schizophrenia or Faulty
          Chemicals?
    Faulty chemicals cause
schizophrenia but schizophrenia
  may cause faulty chemicals




 Drugs may influence other systems that impact on
 schizophrenia so cant be 100% sure about their
 effects
EVALUATION
 There is a lack of correspondence between taking the drugs and
  signs of clinical effectiveness. It takes 4 weeks to see any sign that
  the drugs are working when they begin to block dopamine
  immediately. We cannot seem to explain this time difference.
 It could be that the development of receptors in one part of the brain
  may inhibit the development in another.
 Type 1 cases respond well to conventional anti-psychotic drugs.
  Drugs such as CHLOPROMAZINE: Only effective at relieving the
  Positive Symptoms of the Illness.
 Not effective for negative symptoms. Therefore suggested that Type
  2 is related to a different kind of abnormality such as brain structure.
 PET scans have suggested that drugs did not reduce symptoms of
  patients diagnosed with disorder for 10 yrs or more
 There may be other neurotransmitters involved.
 Possible that social and environmental factors trigger the condition.
Other possible causes


Brain structure
Brain damage
Viral infection
Birth complications
Brain structure

Swayze (1990) reviewed 50
studies of schizophrenics and
found that many had abnormally
large amounts of liquid in the
cavities of the brain. Suddath,
who supports this found the same
enlarged cavities when using MRI
scans on schizophrenic twins.
Structural abnormalities
 Unusually large corpus callosum
 High density of white matter in the right
  frontal and parietal lobe
 Small amount of grey matter in the temporal
  lobes
 A change in blood flow in the cerebral
  hemisphere
 MRI scan show unusually large ventricular
  enlargement but this is also seen in non-
  schizophrenics
 Hippocampus and the thalamus are all
  affected in the brains of schizophrenics
Brain Structure Evidence

Andreasen et 1990 –
 conducted a very well
 controlled CAT scan
 study and found
 significant enlargement
 of the ventricles in
 schizophrenics
 compared to controls.

However this was only
 the case for men and
 not for women.
 Therefore can’t
 generalise the findings
 to women.
Brain Structure

People with
schizophrenia have
abnormally large
ventricles in the
brain. Ventricles are
fluid filled cavities.
This means that the
brains of
schizophrenics are
lighter than normal.
Enlarged ventricles due to
medications?
Beng-Choon Ho (2010)        However this was a
in a longitudinal           correlational study so it
correlational study of      does not show cause and
211 schizophrenics found    effect. Lewis’s study was
that antipsychotic drugs    carried out on animals so
have measurable             we cannot extrapolate to
influence on brain tissue   humans without caution.
loss over time. This was
supported by Lewis
(2009) who
administered
antipsychotic drugs to
primates and found a
brain volume loss of
10% .
Furthermore
If the reduction in
brain volume is the
cause of the
schizophrenic
symptoms then it
cannot explain why
after 30 years of the
initial onset, 35% of
the schizophrenics are
classified as "much
improved“ because
the cortex does not
grow back, if the
structural differences
were the cause then
no improvement
would be possible.
Brain plasticity

The brain is a
plastic organ
which changes
with the way we
use it so are the
differences in
structure the
cause or the result
of schizophrenia?
Brain Damage
Decreased rate of blinking
Staring
Lack of the blink reflex in
 response to a tap on the
 forehead
Poor visual pursuit movements
Poor pupil reactions to light
Viral Infection
In recent years, there has
been a build up of evidence
supporting the role of viral
infections in the development
of schizophrenia, including the
poliovirus, the flu virus and a
virus called encephalitis
lethargica ('inflammation of
the brain that makes you
tired‘).
Birth Complications
Complications during pregnancy,
abnormal foetal growth and
complications during delivery are
significant risk factors in the
development of schizophrenia.
Those that play a significant role in the
development of schizophrenia include:
bleeding, diabetes and pre-eclampsia
pregnancy complications
Birth Complications

abnormal foetal growth and
 development problems including
 conditions such as low birth weight
 and reduced head circumference
complications of delivery including
 asphyxia (lack of oxygen) and
 emergency Caesarean section
However, the effect of such
 complications is small in
 comparison with factors such as
 genetic pre-disposition to
 schizophrenia.
Biological Causes of Schizophrenia

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Unit 5 epidemiology schizophrenia
Unit 5 epidemiology schizophreniaUnit 5 epidemiology schizophrenia
Unit 5 epidemiology schizophreniaUniversity of Miami
 
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disorders
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disordersGenetic linkage in psychiatric disorders
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disordersSujit Kumar Kar
 
Cognitive disorders
Cognitive disordersCognitive disorders
Cognitive disordersyashi jain
 
Neurobiology of OCD
Neurobiology of OCDNeurobiology of OCD
Neurobiology of OCDCijo Alex
 
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSY
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSYNEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSY
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSYVln Sekhar
 
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorder
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorderSchizophrenia & other psychotic disorder
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorderHussein Ali Ramadhan
 
Thought disorders 1 dr. arpit
Thought disorders 1   dr. arpitThought disorders 1   dr. arpit
Thought disorders 1 dr. arpitArpit Koolwal
 
Rapid cycling bipolar disorder
Rapid cycling bipolar disorderRapid cycling bipolar disorder
Rapid cycling bipolar disorderRajeev Ranjan Raj
 
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorderNeurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorderMariana Marhofer Cel Celli
 
The Prodrome of Schizophrenia
The Prodrome of SchizophreniaThe Prodrome of Schizophrenia
The Prodrome of SchizophreniaPallav Pareek
 
Etiology of Schizophrenia
Etiology of Schizophrenia Etiology of Schizophrenia
Etiology of Schizophrenia Edward Rogers
 
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in children
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in childrenEtiology of psychiartic disorder in children
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in childrenDr. Roshni Maurya
 

Mais procurados (20)

Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizophrenia
Schizophrenia
 
Disorders of thought
Disorders of thoughtDisorders of thought
Disorders of thought
 
Genetics in Psychiatry
Genetics in PsychiatryGenetics in Psychiatry
Genetics in Psychiatry
 
Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizophrenia
Schizophrenia
 
Unit 5 epidemiology schizophrenia
Unit 5 epidemiology schizophreniaUnit 5 epidemiology schizophrenia
Unit 5 epidemiology schizophrenia
 
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disorders
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disordersGenetic linkage in psychiatric disorders
Genetic linkage in psychiatric disorders
 
Cognitive disorders
Cognitive disordersCognitive disorders
Cognitive disorders
 
Neurobiology of OCD
Neurobiology of OCDNeurobiology of OCD
Neurobiology of OCD
 
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSY
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSYNEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSY
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASPECTS OF EPILEPSY
 
Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizophrenia
Schizophrenia
 
HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRY
HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRYHISTORY OF PSYCHIATRY
HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRY
 
Disorders of thought
Disorders of thoughtDisorders of thought
Disorders of thought
 
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorder
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorderSchizophrenia & other psychotic disorder
Schizophrenia & other psychotic disorder
 
Thought disorders 1 dr. arpit
Thought disorders 1   dr. arpitThought disorders 1   dr. arpit
Thought disorders 1 dr. arpit
 
Rapid cycling bipolar disorder
Rapid cycling bipolar disorderRapid cycling bipolar disorder
Rapid cycling bipolar disorder
 
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorderNeurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Neurobiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
 
The Prodrome of Schizophrenia
The Prodrome of SchizophreniaThe Prodrome of Schizophrenia
The Prodrome of Schizophrenia
 
Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizophrenia
Schizophrenia
 
Etiology of Schizophrenia
Etiology of Schizophrenia Etiology of Schizophrenia
Etiology of Schizophrenia
 
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in children
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in childrenEtiology of psychiartic disorder in children
Etiology of psychiartic disorder in children
 

Semelhante a Biological Causes of Schizophrenia

LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptx
LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptxLANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptx
LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptxBikramKafle2
 
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approacesh
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approaceshSchizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approacesh
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approaceshPriya Puri
 
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptx
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptxSCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptx
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptxAyooluwaOlaniyi
 
Genetic aspects of specific psychiatric disorders
Genetic  aspects of specific psychiatric disordersGenetic  aspects of specific psychiatric disorders
Genetic aspects of specific psychiatric disordersGaylordInena
 
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topic
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia TopicAQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topic
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topicaesop
 
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdf
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdfGENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdf
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdfShanuSoni7
 
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1st
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1stEtiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1st
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1stTaniya Thomas
 
PSYA4 - Schizophrenia
PSYA4 - SchizophreniaPSYA4 - Schizophrenia
PSYA4 - SchizophreniaNicky Burt
 
Schizophrenia by Alice Alverio
Schizophrenia by Alice AlverioSchizophrenia by Alice Alverio
Schizophrenia by Alice AlverioAlice Alverio
 
Biological explanations of schizophrenia
Biological explanations of schizophreniaBiological explanations of schizophrenia
Biological explanations of schizophreniasssfcpsychology
 
Schizophrenia .pdf
Schizophrenia .pdfSchizophrenia .pdf
Schizophrenia .pdfssuser9127b3
 
Causes of schizophrenia
Causes of schizophreniaCauses of schizophrenia
Causes of schizophreniaaetling
 
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...Pırıl Erel
 
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER .docx
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER                       .docxRunning head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER                       .docx
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER .docxtoltonkendal
 

Semelhante a Biological Causes of Schizophrenia (19)

LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptx
LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptxLANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptx
LANDMARK STUDIES ON GENETICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA bikram.pptx
 
Biological aspects of schizophrenia
Biological aspects of schizophreniaBiological aspects of schizophrenia
Biological aspects of schizophrenia
 
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approacesh
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approaceshSchizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approacesh
Schizophrenia- biological and neuropsychological approacesh
 
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptx
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptxSCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptx
SCHIZOPHRENIA Epidemiology and Genetics.pptx
 
Genetic aspects of specific psychiatric disorders
Genetic  aspects of specific psychiatric disordersGenetic  aspects of specific psychiatric disorders
Genetic aspects of specific psychiatric disorders
 
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topic
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia TopicAQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topic
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Schizophrenia Topic
 
Personality disorder epidemiology & etiology
Personality disorder  epidemiology & etiologyPersonality disorder  epidemiology & etiology
Personality disorder epidemiology & etiology
 
Scizoprenia
ScizopreniaScizoprenia
Scizoprenia
 
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdf
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdfGENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdf
GENETICS IN PSYCHIATRY.pdf
 
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1st
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1stEtiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1st
Etiology of schizophrenia. taniya thomas. msc 1st
 
PSYA4 - Schizophrenia
PSYA4 - SchizophreniaPSYA4 - Schizophrenia
PSYA4 - Schizophrenia
 
Schizophrenia
SchizophreniaSchizophrenia
Schizophrenia
 
Schizophrenia by Alice Alverio
Schizophrenia by Alice AlverioSchizophrenia by Alice Alverio
Schizophrenia by Alice Alverio
 
Biological explanations of schizophrenia
Biological explanations of schizophreniaBiological explanations of schizophrenia
Biological explanations of schizophrenia
 
Schizophrenia .pdf
Schizophrenia .pdfSchizophrenia .pdf
Schizophrenia .pdf
 
Causes of schizophrenia
Causes of schizophreniaCauses of schizophrenia
Causes of schizophrenia
 
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...
How much do we really understand about Schizophrenia and to what extent is so...
 
Down syndrome
Down syndromeDown syndrome
Down syndrome
 
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER .docx
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER                       .docxRunning head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER                       .docx
Running head SCHIZOPHRENIA MENTAL DISORDER .docx
 

Mais de kellula

Biological Theories of Gender
Biological Theories of GenderBiological Theories of Gender
Biological Theories of Genderkellula
 
Health Psychology Revision
Health Psychology RevisionHealth Psychology Revision
Health Psychology Revisionkellula
 
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline David
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline DavidSchizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline David
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline Davidkellula
 
Sampling
SamplingSampling
Samplingkellula
 
Inferential statistics powerpoint
Inferential statistics powerpointInferential statistics powerpoint
Inferential statistics powerpointkellula
 
Psychological therapies and schizophrenia
Psychological therapies and schizophreniaPsychological therapies and schizophrenia
Psychological therapies and schizophreniakellula
 
Biological explanations by S Laljee
Biological explanations by S LaljeeBiological explanations by S Laljee
Biological explanations by S Laljeekellula
 
Dopamine hypothesis
Dopamine hypothesisDopamine hypothesis
Dopamine hypothesiskellula
 

Mais de kellula (10)

Biological Theories of Gender
Biological Theories of GenderBiological Theories of Gender
Biological Theories of Gender
 
Health Psychology Revision
Health Psychology RevisionHealth Psychology Revision
Health Psychology Revision
 
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline David
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline DavidSchizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline David
Schizophrenia and diagnosis by Angeline David
 
Sampling
SamplingSampling
Sampling
 
Inferential statistics powerpoint
Inferential statistics powerpointInferential statistics powerpoint
Inferential statistics powerpoint
 
Freud
FreudFreud
Freud
 
Freud2
Freud2Freud2
Freud2
 
Psychological therapies and schizophrenia
Psychological therapies and schizophreniaPsychological therapies and schizophrenia
Psychological therapies and schizophrenia
 
Biological explanations by S Laljee
Biological explanations by S LaljeeBiological explanations by S Laljee
Biological explanations by S Laljee
 
Dopamine hypothesis
Dopamine hypothesisDopamine hypothesis
Dopamine hypothesis
 

Biological Causes of Schizophrenia

  • 2. Assumptions of biological explanations  All mental disorders have a physical cause. (micro-organisms, genetics, biochemistry or neuroanatomy)  Mental illnesses can be described in terms of clusters of symptoms.  Symptoms can be identified, leading to the diagnosis of an illness.  Diagnosis leads to appropriate physical treatments.
  • 3. Schizophrenia: genetics factors Prevalence of schizophrenia is the same all over the world (about 1%) Supports a biological view as prevalence does not vary with environment However, there are variations within broad geographical areas (e.g. Torrey 2002 – found high rates of Sz in Ireland, 4% of the population, the incidence is also high in Croatia and Scandinavian countries but low in Spain and Italy and very low in some parts of Africa)
  • 4. How do we study the influence Concordance rate: of genetic factors? the proportion of pairs where both If the concordance rate is individuals share a 100% in MZ twins it means certain characteristic. that the characteristic is genetically determined. If it less than the 100% but higher that DZ twins What does it mean? Twin However they However one studies might be is usually treated born bigger Dizygotic differently Monozygotic than the other twins twins Share as Share the same many genes genes and the as siblings same but share environment the same environment
  • 5. Family Adoption studies studies Children share 50% If the adopted children of their genes with have a higher each of their concordance rate for parents. If one of Sz with their biological their parent is parents than with their schizophrenic has adoptive parents, does the child more it support the chance to be influence of genetic schizophrenic? If factors? he/she is Sz, are only genetic factors responsible?
  • 6. Twin studies  Gottesman and Shields ( reviewed the results of 5 twin studies looking for concordance rates for schizophrenia. These studies looked at 210 MZ twins and 319 DZ twins  It was found that in MZ twins there was a concordance rate of 35-58% compared with dizygotic (DZ) twin rates that ranged from 9-26%. They also found a concordance rate in MZ twins of 75-91% when the sample was restricted to the most severe form of schizophrenia.
  • 7.  The milder forms of schizophrenia had concordance rates of 17-33% suggesting that there may be greater genetic loading with severe forms of schizophrenia. The twin studies have all assumed that the shared environmental effects for MZ and DZ twins are equal which may be incorrect Twins are not representative of the wider population. (gestational environment) It is a very small sample. There are very few MZ twins in the population and only 1% are Sz. Are these diagnosis made using the same criteria?
  • 8. Adoption studies Prevalence Prevalence amongst among biological adoptive relatives relatives Kety et al 13% 2% (1968) schizophrenia only Tienari et al 30% 15% (1994) all ‘severe’ psych. diagnoses Could the psychiatrist making the diagnosis in the WereHowtheyweretheir biological theythatregularly? child Did influenced children when parents one offamily? Weretheyolddiagnosishe/she using the same adopted? be adopted by members of the were criteria? these see if made is aware extended both of the parents are Sz??
  • 9. The overall picture This seems to indicate an influence of genetic factors but also the importance of environmental/ social factors
  • 10. So have we found a gene responsible for Sz? In 2006, an Edinburgh University team found people carrying a variant of a gene called neuregulin had a higher chance of developing psychotic symptoms. However since then research has shown that Sz involves a huge number of genes with each of them making only a small contribution to the development of the disorder according to Robin Murray a leading schizophrenia researcher.
  • 11. Risk rises with degree of genetic relatedness Spouse – 1% (same as general population) Child – 13% DZ twin – 17% MZ twin – 48% Effect of shared environment?
  • 12.  Substantial evidence for a genetic contribution  Some evidence disputed: Shared environment issues Diagnostic criteria in adoption studies All the evidence also suggests environmental triggers: Epigenetics could explain that the concordance rate is less than 100% in MZ twinsHeritability is similar with other major disorders such as breast cancer, hypertension, etc  How is schizophrenia inherited and what exactly is inherited?
  • 14. Schizophrenia: Biochemical  The dysfunction of several neurotransmitter systems  Dopamine,  5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT; Serotonin)  Glutamate  are thought to play a part in schizophrenia.  We will concentrate on the Dopamine Hypothesis
  • 15. Schizophrenia & dopamine  The dopamine hypothesis: Schizophrenia is caused by excessive DA activity. This causes abnormal functioning of DA-dependent brain systems, resulting in schizophrenic symptoms DA can increase or decrease brain activity depending on the system you’re looking at
  • 16. Lets remind ourselves how neurotransmitters work
  • 17. DOPAMINE HYPOTHESIS The Dopamine hypothesis states that the brain of schizophrenic patients produces more dopamine than normal brains. –Evidence comes from –studies with drugs –post mortems –pet scans
  • 18. Elevated Level of Normal Level of Dopamine In The Brain of a Dopamine In The Schizophrenic Patient Human Brain (specifically the D2 receptor)  Neurons that use the transmitter ‘dopamine’ fire too often and transmit too many messages or too often.  Certain D2 receptors are known to play a key role in guiding attention.  Lowering DA activity helps remove the symptoms of schizophrenia
  • 19. Parkinson’s disease  Parkinson’s sufferers have low levels of dopamine  L-dopa raises DA activity  People with Parkinson's develop schizophrenic symptoms if they take too much L-dopa Chlorphromazine (given to schizophrenics) reduces the symptoms by blocking D2 receptors
  • 20. ROLE OF DRUGS –Amphetamines (agonists) lead to increase in DA levels –Large quantities lead to delusions and hallucinations –If drugs are given to schizophrenic patients their symptoms get worse
  • 21. POST MORTEM Falkai et al 1988  Autopsies have found that people with schizophrenia have a larger than usual number of dopamine receptors.  Increase of DA in brain structures and receptor density (left amygdala and caudate nucleus putamen)  Concluded that DA production is abnormal for schizophrenia
  • 22. PET SCANS Lindstroem et al (1999)  Radioactively labelled a chemical L- Dopa  administered to 10 patients with schizophrenia and 10 with no diagnosis  L-Dopa taken up quicker with schizophrenic patients  Suggests they were producing more DA than the control group
  • 23. Which Came First? The Chicken or the Egg? Schizophrenia or Faulty Chemicals? Faulty chemicals cause schizophrenia but schizophrenia may cause faulty chemicals Drugs may influence other systems that impact on schizophrenia so cant be 100% sure about their effects
  • 24. EVALUATION  There is a lack of correspondence between taking the drugs and signs of clinical effectiveness. It takes 4 weeks to see any sign that the drugs are working when they begin to block dopamine immediately. We cannot seem to explain this time difference.  It could be that the development of receptors in one part of the brain may inhibit the development in another.  Type 1 cases respond well to conventional anti-psychotic drugs. Drugs such as CHLOPROMAZINE: Only effective at relieving the Positive Symptoms of the Illness.  Not effective for negative symptoms. Therefore suggested that Type 2 is related to a different kind of abnormality such as brain structure.  PET scans have suggested that drugs did not reduce symptoms of patients diagnosed with disorder for 10 yrs or more  There may be other neurotransmitters involved.  Possible that social and environmental factors trigger the condition.
  • 25. Other possible causes Brain structure Brain damage Viral infection Birth complications
  • 26.
  • 27. Brain structure Swayze (1990) reviewed 50 studies of schizophrenics and found that many had abnormally large amounts of liquid in the cavities of the brain. Suddath, who supports this found the same enlarged cavities when using MRI scans on schizophrenic twins.
  • 28. Structural abnormalities  Unusually large corpus callosum  High density of white matter in the right frontal and parietal lobe  Small amount of grey matter in the temporal lobes  A change in blood flow in the cerebral hemisphere  MRI scan show unusually large ventricular enlargement but this is also seen in non- schizophrenics  Hippocampus and the thalamus are all affected in the brains of schizophrenics
  • 29. Brain Structure Evidence Andreasen et 1990 – conducted a very well controlled CAT scan study and found significant enlargement of the ventricles in schizophrenics compared to controls. However this was only the case for men and not for women. Therefore can’t generalise the findings to women.
  • 30. Brain Structure People with schizophrenia have abnormally large ventricles in the brain. Ventricles are fluid filled cavities. This means that the brains of schizophrenics are lighter than normal.
  • 31.
  • 32. Enlarged ventricles due to medications? Beng-Choon Ho (2010) However this was a in a longitudinal correlational study so it correlational study of does not show cause and 211 schizophrenics found effect. Lewis’s study was that antipsychotic drugs carried out on animals so have measurable we cannot extrapolate to influence on brain tissue humans without caution. loss over time. This was supported by Lewis (2009) who administered antipsychotic drugs to primates and found a brain volume loss of 10% .
  • 33. Furthermore If the reduction in brain volume is the cause of the schizophrenic symptoms then it cannot explain why after 30 years of the initial onset, 35% of the schizophrenics are classified as "much improved“ because the cortex does not grow back, if the structural differences were the cause then no improvement would be possible.
  • 34. Brain plasticity The brain is a plastic organ which changes with the way we use it so are the differences in structure the cause or the result of schizophrenia?
  • 35. Brain Damage Decreased rate of blinking Staring Lack of the blink reflex in response to a tap on the forehead Poor visual pursuit movements Poor pupil reactions to light
  • 36. Viral Infection In recent years, there has been a build up of evidence supporting the role of viral infections in the development of schizophrenia, including the poliovirus, the flu virus and a virus called encephalitis lethargica ('inflammation of the brain that makes you tired‘).
  • 37. Birth Complications Complications during pregnancy, abnormal foetal growth and complications during delivery are significant risk factors in the development of schizophrenia. Those that play a significant role in the development of schizophrenia include: bleeding, diabetes and pre-eclampsia pregnancy complications
  • 38. Birth Complications abnormal foetal growth and development problems including conditions such as low birth weight and reduced head circumference complications of delivery including asphyxia (lack of oxygen) and emergency Caesarean section However, the effect of such complications is small in comparison with factors such as genetic pre-disposition to schizophrenia.

Notas do Editor

  1. Movie clip: house (ao2 points …… ethics & side effects of biological model approach)