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Summary Schizophrenia Exam Notes: Dopamine & Glutamata Hypothesis, NMDA, Brain Circuits & Symptoms

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Clear, detailed notes on schizophrenia, covering both clinical features and underlying neurobiological mechanisms in a structured, easy-to-understand format. Includes: • Positive vs negative symptoms and core clinical features • The dopamine hypothesis (mesolimbic vs mesocortical pathways) • The glutamate/NMDA hypothesis and its role as a primary mechanism • How glutamate dysfunction leads to dopamine imbalance • Brain circuits and symptom mapping (PFC, VTA, nucleus accumbens) • Sensorimotor gating and sensory filtering deficits • Schizophrenia as a neurodevelopmental disorder • Novel drug approaches and limitations of current treatments These notes focus on mechanistic understanding and evaluation, helping you link neurotransmitters, brain regions, and clinical symptoms - ideal for essay questions and deeper exam understanding. Perfect for biomedical science, neuroscience, psychology, and pharmacology students.

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Schizophrenia

CLINICAL EXPRESSION AND CORE CONCEPT

 A disorder of distorted mental experience, with disruption in how the
brain generates and interprets internal thoughts and external
sensory information.
 Core clinical description: distortion of thought and perception,
and sometimes mood.
 Typical onset: adolescence/early adulthood -> aligns with late
brain maturation of higher cognitive regions.
 Aetiology: strong hereditary component, but not inevitable (genetic
risk increases probability, not certainty).


CLINICAL FEATURES: POSITIVE VS NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS

Positive symptoms (Type I)
 Presence of abnormal thoughts/behaviours:
o Delusions, often paranoid (fixed false beliefs).
o Hallucinations (e.g., hearing voices).
o Thought disorder - inserted thoughts (disrupted sense of
thought ownership/agency).
o Disorganised speech (behavioural output of disordered
thought structure).

Negative symptoms (Type II)
 Absence of normal responses/behaviours:
o Reduced expression of emotion (blunted affect).
o Social withdrawal.
o Poverty of speech.
 Can be harder to detect - look like reduced normal behaviour rather
than obviously abnormal behaviour.

Key:
 Not one single uniform illness: it’s heterogeneous, with subtypes
and variable symptom profiles.
 Positive symptoms often drive diagnosis (they are “louder”), while
negative/cognitive changes may have been present earlier but only
become obvious in hindsight.



THE DOPAMINE HYPOTHESIS: CURRENT STATUS + LIMITATIONS

What the evidence supports
Dopamine hyperactivity as a real and measurable feature in
schizophrenia.
 DA hyperactivity demonstrated in patients.

,  Drug-naïve patients show increased DA synthesis (reduces the “it’s
just medication effects” argument).
 Basal and amphetamine-induced DA release is elevated.
 Correlates with acute episodes and with responsiveness to
antipsychotic treatment.

Why it’s considered overly simplistic
Even if dopamine is involved, it may not be the primary driver of the
disorder.
 Neuroleptics take weeks to work - suggests symptom improvement
may depend on slower secondary changes rather than immediate
receptor blockade alone.
 They mainly reduce positive symptoms, leaving negative/cognitive
problems less treated.



THE GLUTAMATE/NMDA HYPOTHESIS (PRIMARY DEFECT MODEL)

Reframes schizophrenia as fundamentally a glutamatergic disorder, where
dopamine changes are secondary.
 Core claim: glutamatergic hypoactivity is primary, dopamine
hyperactivity is secondary.

NMDA antagonists as a “drug model” of psychosis
 NMDA receptor blockade -> reducing NMDA transmission can
reproduce a schizophrenia-like state -> therefore schizophrenia is
correlated with NMDA receptor hypofunction.
 PCP is a non-competitive NMDA channel blocker; can be clinically
indistinguishable from acute paranoid schizophrenia.
 Produces both Type I and Type II symptoms (vs amphetamine maps
more onto Type I-like effects).
 Intensifies psychotic symptoms in schizophrenic patients.
 Other antagonists are similar, ketamine noted.

NMDA knockdown mice
 Converging evidence that NMDA hypofunction can produce Type II-
like behavioural changes.
 Only 5–10% of normal NMDA receptor function vs wild-type.
 Behavioural changes described as Type II-like:
o Decreased social interaction
o Decreased mating frequency
o Increased escape behaviour.
 Reported as reversed by antipsychotics (possibility).




HOW GLUTAMATE HYPOFUNCTION COULD CREATE “DOPAMINE
IMBALANCE”

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