Questions And Answers Verified 100% Correct
Multiple sclerosis - ANSWER chronic, inflammatory autoimmune demyelinating disease
of the CNS. : patho includes CNS demyelination thought to be caused by an immune
reaction
Acetylcholine - ANSWER excitatory or inhibitory, enables muscle action, learning,
memory- involved in memory impairment in Alzheimer's disease
Norepinephrine - ANSWER Helps control alertness and arousal. Under supply can
depress mood.
Serotonin - ANSWER inhibitory, involved with mood, hunger, sleep, and arousal-
insufficient linked to depression, involved in migraine headaches, Prozac and
antidepressant drugs raise levels
Dopamine - ANSWER excitatory, influences movement, learning, emotions, pleasure,
decreased levels associated with tremors in parkinson's and depression, excess linked
to schizophrenia
GABA - ANSWER major inhibitory, undersupply linked to anxiety, seizures, tremors
and insomnia
Glutamate - ANSWER A major excitatory neurotransmitter; involved in memory,
oversupply can overstimulate brain producing migraines or seizures (MSG)
PKU - ANSWER is a rare, inherited disorder that causes increased the levels of
phenylalanine in the blood due to a defect in the gene that helps create an enzyme,
tyrosine
Tyrosine is needed - ANSWER to synthesize proteins, melanin and thyroxine, and
break down phenylalanine
Tyrosine is found in - ANSWER all proteins, artificial sweeteners
Failure to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine - ANSWER can cause cognitive disabilities,
seizures
, Myasthenia gravis patho - ANSWER patho includes antibodies that attach to receptor
sites and block the binding of acetylcholine causing atrophy of muscles and decrease
use
Attention defecit disorder - ANSWER excessive frontal lobe activity resulting in frontal
lobe dysfunction (hyperactivity)
Triad of symptoms for ADHD - ANSWER inattentiveness, impulsivity, hyperactivity,
multimodal regimen needs to be considered
Dementia characteristics - ANSWER is an acquired impairment of intellectual function,
memory and language with alteration in behavior and can be caused by trauma,
vascular disease, infection and progressive neurodegeneration. AD is most common
chronic irreversible dementia
Delirium characteristics - ANSWER acute confusional state, transient disorders of
awareness that have sudden or gradual onset can be caused by alcohol or drugs,
withdrawal from, metabolic disorders, trauma, anesthesia, fever/heatstroke, electrolyte
imbalance, organ failure
Migraine Headaches - ANSWER a common, multifactorial, disabling, recurrent and
hereditary neurovascular headache disorders. can begin with auras. usually unilateral
and pulsating
auras - ANSWER transient focal neurological symptoms whose origin is though to
involve the hypothalamus, brainstem and cortex
Migraines are - ANSWER an inflammatory process. The MAIN POINTS are that there
are likely alterations in serotonin and other neurotransmitters, neurologic, vascular
(inflammation) and hormonal components (estrogen).
Neurovascular Hypothesis - ANSWER A trigger alters a specific area of the brain stem
called the locus ceruleus and triggers release of serotonin into the trigeminal vascular
tree. Not all patients are able to identify a trigger. Those commonly identified include
lack of sleep, stress, hormonal changes, physical exertion, weather changes or certain
foods (most commonly wine caffeine, monosodium glutamate, nitrates, and artificial
sweeteners).
Perivascular inflammatory process - ANSWER Pain sensors in the ophthalmic branch
of the trigeminal nerve become active and release neuropeptides that cause dilation of
blood vessels. This produces even more nerve irritation. The inflammatory response
and distended blood vessels stimulate the trigeminal nerve; producing pain long after
the trigger is gone.