Clinical Neuroscience By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley.

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CHAPTER 7 TRAUMATIC AND CHRONIC BRAIN DAMAGE Clinical Neuroscience By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley

Transcript of Clinical Neuroscience By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley.

Page 1: Clinical Neuroscience By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley.

CHAPTER 7TRAUMATIC AND CHRONIC BRAIN

DAMAGE

Clinical Neuroscience

By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley

Page 2: Clinical Neuroscience By Kelly Lambert and Craig Howard Kinsley.

Chapter 7 Overview Review Concepts:

Brain imaging techniques (from Ch. 1)Neuroplasticity

Brain injuriesTraumatic Brain Injury (rapid onset)Chronic Brain damage (long-term onset)

For each injury, we’ll discuss:CausesEffectsTreatment methodsFuture Prospects

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Connections

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) can strike anyoneBob Woodruff, ABC News

reporter, wounded in Iraq.

Recovery can be improved by a variety of factors:EducationEnriched environmentNeural reserves

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Traumatic Brain InjuryCauses and Consequences Generally considered a result of impact to the skull

Other causes

Human cost:50,000-80,000 deaths annually235,000 hospitalizations annually~ 5 million Americans suffering lasting effects

Financial cost:$150,000 non-medical costsFatalities cost ~$450,000/case

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Traumatic Brain InjuryWho’s at risk?

Individuals:15-24 years oldOver 64 years oldMenPeople consuming alcoholAthletes

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Traumatic Brain InjuryEffects Primary

Axon ShearingSubdural hematomaEpidural hematomaContusion

Secondary EffectsIonic fluxHyperglycolysisEAAs

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Traumatic Brain InjuryTreatments Glasgow Coma Scale

Initial assessment

Surgery Hematomas Depressed Skull fractures

Pharmacological Intervention Cognitive impairment

○ Dopamine○ Acetylcholine

Depression○ Serotonergic pathway

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Traumatic Brain InjuryTreatments

Progesterone Therapy Don Stein’s work with mother rats

Cognitive Rehabilitation Yeshuda Ben-Yishay Holistic neuropsychological

rehabilitation program

Constraint-induced movement therapy

Environmental Enrichment General Enrichment Physical exercise Formal motor training

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Traumatic Brain InjuryPrevention TBI is very common and preventable through:

1. Education

2. Enactment of safety laws

3. Enforcement of safety laws

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Parkinson’s DiseaseCauses and Consequences Degeneration of the dopaminergic

pathways in the substantia nigra

Parellel deficits in other neurotransmitter pathwaysAcetylcholineSerotoninNorepinephrine

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Parkinson’s DiseaseTreatments

SurgeryThalamotomyPallidotomy

Pharmacological interventionLevodopa (l-dopa)Decarboxylase inhibitor

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Parkinson’s DiseaseTreatments/Future Directions Surgery (again!)

Deep Brain StimulationTransplantation of dopaminergic neurons (stem cells)

Neuroprotection?Identification of early symptomsTreatment before completely realized

Michael J. Fox Foundation

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Summary

13Lambert and Kinsley, Chapter 7