CIDPUSA.ORG Autoimmune
Neurology Anatomy Physiology
Aprial 24, 2020
Altered States part2
Neurons and Nerves
neurotransmitter
The Brain
& Spinal Cord
Cranial Nerves
Peripheral Nervous System
Autonomic Nervous System
Senses:Eye diagrams,Hearing,Smell,Taste,
Taste & Tongue Sensation,Balance
Memory , Memory types,
Creation of Memory,
Higher Functions
Altered States
[Top]
I
Sexual fantasy - This is the ability to use our imaginations erotically. It is found that people spend a surprising
amount of time thinking about sex. There are vast cultural differences in what different societies consider acceptable
material for sexual fantasy and fetishes. The Victorians considered fetish to be shocking and dangerous, the true
dark side of sexuality; while the Freudian view treats fetishism as the result of linking unresolved childhood
drives to object that seems "safe" such as the high-heeled shoe. Many therapists now consider that it is perfectly
normal to have sexual fantasies, and some even believe that they can be used to achieve a more fulfilling sex life.
Research into sexual fantasies is complicated and must rely on what patients report to their therapists, but some
studies have found links with childhood events - either sexual violence or a strict, repressed upbringing. There is
an obvious distinction between fantasy and action - a
fantasy does not harm others. However, some people who have fantasies that involves inflicting pain to themselves or
others (such as to the cat in Figure 38) claim that they feel compelled to act them out. Sometimes people with
less extreme fantasies also choose to turn them into
realities such as in the form of cross dressing.
&
Addiction - Drug addiction is caused by a similar train
of events to hunger. However, unlike most types of food,
addictive drugs cause changes in the receptors to which they
bind, making them less sensitive. This creates tolerance and
addiction. Most addictive drugs work by altering levels of
neurotransmitters in the brains reward circuitry centered
on the limbic areas. Other brain areas are also involved and
each type of drug works in a slightly different way to
produce its characteristic effects. Opiates are drugs
derived from the dried resin of the opium poppy (Figure 39),
or synthetic versions of these chemicals, such as heroin,
codeine and morphine. All
have been used medicinally at some time for their
pain-killing properties. They are used illegally for
similar reasons: heroin gives the user a "high",
reducing anxiety and producing a sense of temporary
well-being.
Schizophrenia (shattered mind) - There is evidence to suggest that genetic vulnerability and environmental stressors can act
in combination to cause schizophrenia. Some researchers estimate schizophrenia to be highly heritable. But a recent review of the
genetic evidence has suggested only a 28% chance of one identical twin developing schizophrenia if the other already has
it. A recent study listed seven genes as likely to be involved in the inheritance of schizophrenia or the risk of developing
the disease. One of these genes known as COMT is involved in encoding the dopamine catabolic enzyme. This is interesting
because of the known link between dopamine function, psychosis, and schizophrenia. There is considerable evidence indicating
that stressful life events cause or trigger schizophrenia psychosis. Childhood experiences of abuse or trauma have also
been implicated as risk factors for a diagnosis of schizophrenia later in life. There is also consistent evidence that negative
attitudes towards individuals with schizophrenia can have a significant adverse impact. In particular, critical comments,
hostility, and intrusive or controlling attitudes from family members have been found to correlate with a higher risk of
relapse in schizophrenia across cultures. Factors such as poverty and discrimination also appear to be involved in
increasing the risk of schizophrenia or
schizophrenia relapse, perhaps due to the high levels of stress they engender. The disease is frequently accompanied
by paranoia and delusions. Some may experience extremely bizarre hallucinations. Ironically, while some areas of the
schizophrenic brain may be dead, in other ways the sufferers brain is overactive. Most schizophrenics appear
to have an excess of dopamine in the brain, the neurons become overloaded and relay inappropriate messages (see
Figure 40 for a modern view). Lack of activity in the frontal lobes is a feature of states of mind in which
consciousness is disturbed. This might account for the states common reduction in planned or spontaneous behavior
and social withdrawal. The anterior cingulate cortex - thought to distinguish between external and internal stimuli
- is also underactive (Figure 33), which
may be one reason schizophrenics confuse their own thoughts
with outside voices.
Recently in 2006, it is found that those with mutations in the PCM1 gene had a significantly lower volume of
grey matter in their orbitofrontal
cortex resulting in poor judgement, inappropriate
social behaviour and not keeping themselves clean. PCM1
plays a role in cell division, which in the brain occurs
more actively at adolescence - an age at which
schizophrenia is commonly diagnosed.
Dementia - Dementia is used to describe the organic
deterioration of the brain that affects the elderly. The main,
but not sole, form of dementia is Alzheimers disease, and 25
percent of people who live to be older than 85 will show some
symptoms. One of the hallmarks of Alzheimers disease is the
accumulation of amyloid plaques between neurons in the brain.
Amyloid is a general term for protein fragments that the body
produces normally. In a healthy brain, these protein fragments
would be broken down and eliminated. In Alzheimers disease, the
fragments accumulate to form hard, insoluble plaques (see Figure
41). Neurofibrillary tangles consist of insoluble twisted fibers
that are found inside of the brains cells. They primarily
consist of a protein called tau, which forms part of a structure
called a microtubule. The microtubule helps transport nutrients
and other important substances from one part of the nerve cell
to another. In Alzheimers disease the tau protein is abnormal
and the microtubule structures collapse (see Figure 41). There
is an overall shrinkage of brain tissue as Alzheimers disease
progresses. In addition, the ventricles are noticeably enlarged.
In the early stages of Alzheimers disease, short-term memory
begins to decline when the cells in the hippocampus, degenerate
(see Figure 41). The ability to perform routine tasks also declines. As Alzheimers disease spreads through the
cerebral cortex, judgment declines, emotional outbursts may
occur and language is impaired. Progression of the disease
leads to the death of more nerve cells and subsequent
behavior changes, such as wandering and agitation. The
ability to recognize faces and to communicate is completely
lost in the final stages. Patients lose bowel and bladder
control, and eventually need constant care. This stage of
complete dependency may last for years before the patient
dies. The average length of time from diagnosis to death is
4 to 8 years, although it can take 20 years or more for the
disease to run its course.
Vision - It is virtually
impossible to carry out research into visions in the laboratory,
because they do not happen on demand; as a result, the only
evidence that visions do exist is the accounts of those people
who have experienced them. Vision may occur in response to
stress. They are often central to religious experience.
Out-of-body experiences are not restricted to religious
practices: they seem to occur in response to some kind of
emergency situation. This is the case with near-deathexperiences. There have been thousands of reports of
near-death experiences, many noting the same types of
sensations. Subjects feel as though they have left their
bodies. Some people report travelling down a tunnel toward a
bright light (Figure 42), where benevolent presences wait.
Scientists have been unable to explain them conclusively.
Some physiologists have suggested that hypoxia, or low
oxygen levels in the brain, might cause a consistent pattern
of hallucination in all sufferers. Other scientists argue
that the experience stems from an acute bout of "REM
intrusion" into the partially awakening state (in time
of extreme stress) similar to narcolepsy - a
neurological disorder characterised by uncontrollable
bouts of sleep that can cause elaborate hallucinations
and, sometimes, out-of-body experiences.
¶The challenge of finding an ideal
model animal in which a physical basis of memory formation might
be revealed was taken up in the 1960s byE.
R. Kandel, who eventually received the Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine in 2000 for his efforts on investigating
the nervous system with Aplysia. The Aplysia did not share the
prize, but his daughter Minouche at the age of seven has written
a poem to enshrine the animal:
An aplisa is like a squishy snail.
In rain, in snow, in
sleet, in hail.
When it is angry, it shoots out ink.
The ink is purple, its not pink.
An aplisa cannot live
on land.
It doesnt have feet so it cant stand.
It
has a very funny mouth.
And in winter it goes to the
south.
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