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Chapter 14: Injury and Illness

In this chapter…

  • Brain Tumors

  • Multiple Sclerosis

  • Neurological AIDS

  • Neurological Trauma

  • Pain

  • Seizures and Epilepsy

  • Stroke

Brain Tumors

  • Primary brain tumors: tumors that begin in brain tissue but don’t spread to other tissues

    • These tumors can spread through the brain but be benign

  • Malignant brain tumors: harmful tumors that can originate from brain or spread to the brain

    • They have a greater likelihood to grow faster and invade

    • These tumors are coupled with the identity of specific cells in tumor

      • Some of these criteria are used to classify a tumor’s grade

        • grade: severity of a tumor

  • No matter what grade the tumor is it’s harmful because it can interfere with normal brain activity

  • Symptoms of brain tumors vary with the location and size

    • Seizures and headaches are the most common symptoms

  • Gliomas: brain and spinal cord tumors originating in and comprised of cancerous glial cells

    • These cancerous glia release glutamate at toxic concentrations

      • Glutamate kills off neurons near the tumor, making room for expansion

      • The glutamate is also responsible for seizures

  • The expanding tumor can increase the pressure in the skull

    • This causes headaches, vomiting, visual disturbances, and impaired mental functioning

  • Tumors are diagnosed with MRI & CT scans

    • Early imaging is beneficial because tumors can be identified at a lower grade

      • This improves the course of disease & outcome

  • Treatment options for primary brain tumors are limited

    • Surgery is generally the first step

      • This can only be done if the tumor is accessible and won’t damage vital structures

    • Radiation can be used to stop a tumor’s growth or cause it to shrink

    • Chemotherapy destroys tumor cells that remain after surgery and radiation

      • Unfortunately it is not very effective for gliomas

        • The blood-brain barrier makes it hard for drugs to reach the brain

  • Trials for targeted therapies are aimed at the biologic characteristics of tumors

    • Possibilities include:

      • Vaccines made from the tumor with things that boost the immune system or kill tumor cells

      • Monoclonal antibodies that hone in on receptors on the surface of tumor cells

        • Monoclonal antibodies: antibodies produced by clones of a single cell

      • Anti-angiogenic therapy: restricting the tumor’s blood supply

      • Immunotherapy: using the body’s own immune system against the tumor

      • Gene therapy: delivering bioengineered genes to tumor cells to kill them

      • There are several approaches for targeted delivery of antibodies, toxins, or growth-inhibiting molecules that attach to tumor cells and interfere with growth

        • Chlorotoxin: a scorpion-derived toxin that can interfere with the spread of tumor

          • Shows promise in studies

            • Extended individuals’ life expectancy significantly

  • Stem cells might have a role in the origin of brain tumors

  • Cells in tumors that may be most harmful may be able to be tracked

  • Epidemiologists are looking into tumor genetics and patients’ lifestyles, environments, occupations, medical histories

    • Epidemiologists: scientists who study disease in human populations

Multiple Sclerosis

  • Multiple Sclerosis (MS): Autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks the myelin sheath covering the axons of neurons in the Central Nervous System

    • Diagnosed between 20-40

    • Affects essentially every aspect of a patient’s life

  • The lossoss of myelin results in damage to nerve fibers

    • Damage may be so severe that the nerve fiber deteriorates

    • Comparable to loss of insulating material around electrical or cutting of wire

      • This interferes with the transmission of signals

  • After the loss of myelin, the axon sheath is repaired and replaced by scars (scleroses) of hardened patches of tissue

    • Usually associated with further degeneration of nerve fibers

    • Lesions/plaques: areas of disease activity appearing in multiple places in the CNS

  • Both genetic and environmental factors probably play a role in determining who contracts MS

    • Siblings of MS patients have a 2-3% risk while identical twin has a risk of approximately 30%

    • MS is 5x more prevalent in temperate zones than in the tropics

    • Caucasians are more susceptible than other races

  • Studies show that people who got MS before 15 were affected by environmental factors

    • But now, studies suggest that there is no exact age cutoff

  • The spinal cord, cerebellum, and the optic nerve are commonly affected areas

    • Numbness, clumsiness, blurred vision often occur because of this

    • MS can affect many other brain areas, including white matter and grey matter

      • white matter: areas comprised of myelinated nerve fibers

      • grey matter: areas rich in neuron cell bodies and dendrites

  • Symptoms of MS may include

    • slurred speech

    • weakness

    • loss of coordination

    • pain

    • uncontrollable tremors

    • loss of bladder control

    • memory loss

    • depression

    • fatigue

    • other cognitive problems

      • Cognitive symptoms of MS depend on the site of damage

  • Relapsing/remitting MS- there are flares of the disease and then periods where it improves

  • Progressive MS: ongoing nerve fiber degeneration causes the symptoms become permanent and gradually worsen

    • This usually leads to progressive accumulation of disability that affects mobility, strength, balance, and coordination

      • At this point, the MS can’t be cured

  • Many medications control relapsing forms of MS by limiting the immune attack & reducing associated inflammation

    • Steroids may be effective in shortening attacks

      • They help to speed recovery from MS-related acute attacks

    • There are medications and therapies for symptoms but none for the nerve degeneration that causes the progression of MS

Neurological AIDS

  • AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome): advanced HIV infection

    • Life-prolonging drugs make HIV a chronic illness instead of a death sentence in the US

  • In developing countries, only 36% of those who need therapy are getting such treatments

    • Women now represent half of all HIV cases worldwide

  • The main target of HIV is the immune system, but the nervous system can be affected as well

  • HAND: HIV associated neurocognitive disorder

    • Affects 50+ % of HIV patients

    • HAND tends to affect people not receiving CART (combination antiretroviral treatment)

      • CART (combination antiretroviral treatment): a cocktail of 3+ drugs that are meant to work against HIV

    • Side effects of HAND include

      • mild difficulty with concentration

      • memory

      • complex decision-making

      • coordination to progressive

      • fatal dementia

    • HAND may be related to secreted viral products or cytokines

      • cytokines: cell-coded immune signaling molecules

  • Some viral proteins are neurotoxic

    • They may play role in ongoing damage that occurs during infection

      • Viral Tat- a protein released by HIV-infected cells that is suspected of neurotoxicity

  • HIV is the prime mover in HAND

    • Antiretroviral treatment may prevent or reverse the condition in many patients

  • Patients can develop increasing difficulty with concentration and memory as well as experience general slowing of mental processes in late stages of HAND

    • At the same time, the patient may develop leg weakness and a loss of balance

  • Brains of these patients have undergone some shrinkage

  • Neurological effects of AIDS in patients

    • loss of neurons

    • abnormalities in white matter

    • injury to cellular structures involving in interneuron signaling

      • may be related to inflammation and abnormalities with blood vessels

  • Highly active CART is effective in reducing the incidence of severe HAND

    • Such treatment can reverse cognitive abnormalities attributed to brain HIV infection

  • Peripheral neuropathy: nerve injury in the extremities that results in the disease or dysfunction of one or more peripheral nerves

    • Causes discomfort ranging from tingling to burning to severe pain

    • Virus triggers sensory neuropathy by releasing neurotoxins

    • This reaction has been unmasked by antiretroviral drugs that produce mitochondrial toxins

      • Makes neuropathies more frequent and serious

  • Rare opportunistic infections and malignancies are seen more frequently in HIV patients due to immunodeficiency

    • CART greatly reduced the incidence of most of these kinds of infections

Neurological Trauma

  • Traumatic brain & spinal cord injuries can lead to significant disabilities and death

  • Methods to hold off severe neurological damage caused by trauma exist

    • Accomplished by working to prevent secondary pathogenesis

      • secondary pathogenesis: damage that occurs after the initial injury

    • Support regeneration & repair

    • Refine & optimize rehabilitation techniques

Traumatic Brain Injury

  • The main concern is brain pressure

    • It is monitored to prevent bleeding or swelling

  • Treatments for increased intracranial pressure include:

    • the removal of cerebrospinal fluid

    • moderate hyperventilation to decrease blood volume

    • drugs to reduce cellular metabolism

    • removal of water from injured tissue

  • Lesions can consist of surface bleeding or in-brain bleeding

    • This causes the formation of bruises called contusions

      • Contusions can increase brain pressure and contribute to the development of post-traumatic epilepsy

  • Blood leaking from vessels and touching the brain tissue causes localized pressure and reduced cerebral blood flow

    • Blood itself can be also toxic to brain cells

  • Decompressive craniectomy: removal of part of the skull to allow the brain space to swell

    • This is used as a last resort

  • Administering rogesterone cut the number of deaths in severely injured patients by 50%

    • Functional recovery improved by 30 days in moderately injured individuals

  • Treatments of injury-induced reduction of cerebral blood flow are drugs that increase arterial blood pressure

    • These treatments result in an increase in blood flow with the reduction of intracranial pressure

      • Allows more blood to reach vital areas

Spinal Cord Injury

  • Methylprednisolone: the only FDA-approved treatment for spinal cord injury

    • Studies showed some recovery when those with spinal cord injuries got a high IV dose of methylprednisolone within 8 hours of injury

  • After a spinal cord injury, animals can regain the ability to bear their weight and walk at various speeds on a treadmill belt

    • The level of recovery depends a lot on whether the tasks are practiced after injury

  • New nerve cells can be born in the adult brain

    • But these are not sufficient to help the injured brain regenerate

Pain

Treating Pain

  • Local anesthesia: loss of sensation in a limited area

    • These temporarily interrupt the action of all nerve fibers by interfering with sodium channels

    • Examples of local anesthesia include novocaine and lidocaine

      • Topical lidocaine is effective where a light touch to the skin can produce severe pain in neuropathy

  • Analgesia: loss of pain sensation

  • There are 5 main types of analgesics (painkillers)

    • Nonopioids: aspirin and NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs)

      • Examples include ibuprofen and naproxen

      • NSAIDs are useful for treating mild to moderate pain, arthritis, and post-operative pain

        • NSAIDs work by inhibiting the cyclooxygenase enzymes that make prostaglandin

          • Moderate pain can be treated by combining a mild opioid with aspirin or an NSAID

    • Opioids- analgesics that work by binding to opioid receptors

      • Examples include morphine and codeine

      • They are the most potent painkillers and are used for severe pain

        • Adverse side effects include respiratory depression and constipation

        • Opioids have a high potential for abuse

    • Antiepileptic agents: used for treating epilepsy but are also used to treat neuropathic pain and fibromyalgia

      • Examples include gabapentin and topiramate

      • Antiepileptic and antidepressants are useful for treating neuropathic pain coming from injury to the nervous system

        • Includes neuropathy caused by diabetic neuropathy, damage from high blood sugar, nerve pain or numbness from viruses, phantom limb pain, and post-stroke pain

    • Antidepressants: used for treating depression, chronic, and neuropathic pain

      • Examples include amitriptyline, duloxetine

      • Best results come with using antidepressants that regulate serotonin and norepinephrine

        • SSRIs don’t help relieve neuropathic pain

    • Acetaminophen: has analgesic properties but does not reduce inflammation

      • This is the active ingredient in tylenol

The Body’s Pain Control System

  • Opioid receptors are concentrated in the spinal cord

    • This finding led to use of injections of opioids into cerebrospinal fluid without causing paralysis, numbness, or other side effects

    • Injecting morphine into the spinal cord produced large pain control in animal tests

  • Nociceptors: peripheral nerve fibers that initially respond to an injury stimulus

    • Many ion channels and receptors are predominantly or exclusively expressed by nociceptors

  • Adverse side effects of drugs arise from the widespread location of molecules targeted by analgesics

    • Constipation results from morphine’s action on opioid receptors in the gut

  • New painkillers that only target nociceptors will have fewer side effects

    • One specialized receptor channel is activated by capsaicin

      • Capsaicin is the pungent chemical responsible for spice in hot peppers

    • Another receptor channel is activated by mustard oil

    • Blocking the activity of many receptors like these has proven effective

      • This suggests that the creation of drugs targeting these molecules in humans has great value for the treatment of acute and persistent pain

  • The topical application of capsaicin has recently been approved for some neuropathic pain conditions

    • Capsaicin kills the sensing portion of pain fibers

      • But these sensory areas will regenerate, so the process needs to be repeated

  • Pain is in the brain, not in nociceptors that respond to injury

    • Pain involves emotional factors

    • Placebos and hypnosis can significantly reduce pain

      • This shows the importance of psychological factors

Seizures and Epilepsy

  • Seizures: occur due to sudden, disorderly changes in interconnected brain neurons

    • They can alter one or morebrain functions

    • Seizures are associated with epilepsy

  • Epilepsy: a chronic neurological disorder characterized by the occurrence of unprovoked seizures

    • Epilepsy can start at any age

    • Idiopathic epilepsies: epilepsies arising from uncertain or unknown cause

      • Idiopathic epilepsies are probably due to the inheritance of 1+ mutant genes

        • These genes are often mutant ion channel genes

    • Symptomatic epilepsies: epilepsies with a known or presumed cause

      • Symptomatic epilepsies can result from a wide variety of brain diseases or injuries including:

        • Birth trauma

        • Head injury

        • Neurodegenerative disease

        • Brain infection

        • Brain tumor

        • Stroke

  • There are two main types of epilepsies

    • Generalized epilepsy: characterized by the loss of consciousness and range of behavioral changes including convulsions and sudden changes in muscle tone

      • Generalized epilepsy occurs when there is simultaneous excessive electrical activity over a wide area of the brain

        • This often involves thalamus and cerebral cortex

      • Generalized epilepsy is easier to treat

        • Up to 80% of patients become seizure-free with antiepileptic drugs

    • Partial epilepsy: the individual maintains consciousness or has altered awareness and behavioral changes

      • Partial epilepsy can produce

        • localized visual, auditory, skin sensory disturbances

        • repetitive uncontrolled movements

        • confused, automatic behaviors

      • Arises from excessive electrical activity in one area of the brain

        • This is restricted to the cortical or hippocampal area

      • Partial epilepsies are harder to treat

        • Sometimes a combination of drugs is necessary

  • The principal targets of antiepileptic drugs are ion channels or neurotransmitter receptors

  • Surgery is an option for patients with specific partial seizures who don’t respond to antiepileptic drugs

    • Electrical recordings of brain activity from patients allow for the precise localization of the brain area where seizures originate from

    • Improvement or complete remission of seizures occurs for at least several years after the surgery

  • Electrical stimulation therapy: an implanted device delivers small bursts of electrical energy to the brain via the vagus nerve on the side of the neck

    • Vagal nerve stimulation has been shown to reduce the frequency of partial seizures in many patients

Stroke

  • Stroke: occurs when a blood vessel bringing oxygen and nutrients bursts or is clogged by a blood clot or some other particle

    • This causes the brain to be deprived of blood

      • Neurons downstream of the blockage can die within minutes

  • The effects of stroke are location-dependent

    • It can cause permanent disorders like paralysis on one side of the body or the loss of speech

  • Until recently, if someone had a stroke, there were few treatment options outside of physical or speech therapy

    • Patients would live out their remaining months or years with a severe neurological impairment

  • tPA (tissue plasminogen activator): opens blocked vessels rapidly to restore circulation before oxygen loss causes permanent damage

  • Strokes can be prevented by controlling the risk factors

    • These risk factors include diet, exercise, and the use of certain drugs

  • Treatments for stroke include

    • Surgery to place arterial stents

      • keeps arteries open

      • clears clogs in neck arteries

    • Targeting treatment of heart disease to prevent the cutoff of blood supply

    • Anticoagulant drugs to reduce the likelihood of clots forming

    • Targeting mechanisms inside the neuron to slow down mass biochemically-induced neuron death

    • The use of the weakened limb by temporarily restricting the use of the other limb may help functional recovery following a stroke affecting the movement of one limb

    • Neural stem cells can help recovery even if administered several days after the injury

      • Administering growth factors may further enhance the benefits of stem cell transplantation

AA

Chapter 14: Injury and Illness

In this chapter…

  • Brain Tumors

  • Multiple Sclerosis

  • Neurological AIDS

  • Neurological Trauma

  • Pain

  • Seizures and Epilepsy

  • Stroke

Brain Tumors

  • Primary brain tumors: tumors that begin in brain tissue but don’t spread to other tissues

    • These tumors can spread through the brain but be benign

  • Malignant brain tumors: harmful tumors that can originate from brain or spread to the brain

    • They have a greater likelihood to grow faster and invade

    • These tumors are coupled with the identity of specific cells in tumor

      • Some of these criteria are used to classify a tumor’s grade

        • grade: severity of a tumor

  • No matter what grade the tumor is it’s harmful because it can interfere with normal brain activity

  • Symptoms of brain tumors vary with the location and size

    • Seizures and headaches are the most common symptoms

  • Gliomas: brain and spinal cord tumors originating in and comprised of cancerous glial cells

    • These cancerous glia release glutamate at toxic concentrations

      • Glutamate kills off neurons near the tumor, making room for expansion

      • The glutamate is also responsible for seizures

  • The expanding tumor can increase the pressure in the skull

    • This causes headaches, vomiting, visual disturbances, and impaired mental functioning

  • Tumors are diagnosed with MRI & CT scans

    • Early imaging is beneficial because tumors can be identified at a lower grade

      • This improves the course of disease & outcome

  • Treatment options for primary brain tumors are limited

    • Surgery is generally the first step

      • This can only be done if the tumor is accessible and won’t damage vital structures

    • Radiation can be used to stop a tumor’s growth or cause it to shrink

    • Chemotherapy destroys tumor cells that remain after surgery and radiation

      • Unfortunately it is not very effective for gliomas

        • The blood-brain barrier makes it hard for drugs to reach the brain

  • Trials for targeted therapies are aimed at the biologic characteristics of tumors

    • Possibilities include:

      • Vaccines made from the tumor with things that boost the immune system or kill tumor cells

      • Monoclonal antibodies that hone in on receptors on the surface of tumor cells

        • Monoclonal antibodies: antibodies produced by clones of a single cell

      • Anti-angiogenic therapy: restricting the tumor’s blood supply

      • Immunotherapy: using the body’s own immune system against the tumor

      • Gene therapy: delivering bioengineered genes to tumor cells to kill them

      • There are several approaches for targeted delivery of antibodies, toxins, or growth-inhibiting molecules that attach to tumor cells and interfere with growth

        • Chlorotoxin: a scorpion-derived toxin that can interfere with the spread of tumor

          • Shows promise in studies

            • Extended individuals’ life expectancy significantly

  • Stem cells might have a role in the origin of brain tumors

  • Cells in tumors that may be most harmful may be able to be tracked

  • Epidemiologists are looking into tumor genetics and patients’ lifestyles, environments, occupations, medical histories

    • Epidemiologists: scientists who study disease in human populations

Multiple Sclerosis

  • Multiple Sclerosis (MS): Autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks the myelin sheath covering the axons of neurons in the Central Nervous System

    • Diagnosed between 20-40

    • Affects essentially every aspect of a patient’s life

  • The lossoss of myelin results in damage to nerve fibers

    • Damage may be so severe that the nerve fiber deteriorates

    • Comparable to loss of insulating material around electrical or cutting of wire

      • This interferes with the transmission of signals

  • After the loss of myelin, the axon sheath is repaired and replaced by scars (scleroses) of hardened patches of tissue

    • Usually associated with further degeneration of nerve fibers

    • Lesions/plaques: areas of disease activity appearing in multiple places in the CNS

  • Both genetic and environmental factors probably play a role in determining who contracts MS

    • Siblings of MS patients have a 2-3% risk while identical twin has a risk of approximately 30%

    • MS is 5x more prevalent in temperate zones than in the tropics

    • Caucasians are more susceptible than other races

  • Studies show that people who got MS before 15 were affected by environmental factors

    • But now, studies suggest that there is no exact age cutoff

  • The spinal cord, cerebellum, and the optic nerve are commonly affected areas

    • Numbness, clumsiness, blurred vision often occur because of this

    • MS can affect many other brain areas, including white matter and grey matter

      • white matter: areas comprised of myelinated nerve fibers

      • grey matter: areas rich in neuron cell bodies and dendrites

  • Symptoms of MS may include

    • slurred speech

    • weakness

    • loss of coordination

    • pain

    • uncontrollable tremors

    • loss of bladder control

    • memory loss

    • depression

    • fatigue

    • other cognitive problems

      • Cognitive symptoms of MS depend on the site of damage

  • Relapsing/remitting MS- there are flares of the disease and then periods where it improves

  • Progressive MS: ongoing nerve fiber degeneration causes the symptoms become permanent and gradually worsen

    • This usually leads to progressive accumulation of disability that affects mobility, strength, balance, and coordination

      • At this point, the MS can’t be cured

  • Many medications control relapsing forms of MS by limiting the immune attack & reducing associated inflammation

    • Steroids may be effective in shortening attacks

      • They help to speed recovery from MS-related acute attacks

    • There are medications and therapies for symptoms but none for the nerve degeneration that causes the progression of MS

Neurological AIDS

  • AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome): advanced HIV infection

    • Life-prolonging drugs make HIV a chronic illness instead of a death sentence in the US

  • In developing countries, only 36% of those who need therapy are getting such treatments

    • Women now represent half of all HIV cases worldwide

  • The main target of HIV is the immune system, but the nervous system can be affected as well

  • HAND: HIV associated neurocognitive disorder

    • Affects 50+ % of HIV patients

    • HAND tends to affect people not receiving CART (combination antiretroviral treatment)

      • CART (combination antiretroviral treatment): a cocktail of 3+ drugs that are meant to work against HIV

    • Side effects of HAND include

      • mild difficulty with concentration

      • memory

      • complex decision-making

      • coordination to progressive

      • fatal dementia

    • HAND may be related to secreted viral products or cytokines

      • cytokines: cell-coded immune signaling molecules

  • Some viral proteins are neurotoxic

    • They may play role in ongoing damage that occurs during infection

      • Viral Tat- a protein released by HIV-infected cells that is suspected of neurotoxicity

  • HIV is the prime mover in HAND

    • Antiretroviral treatment may prevent or reverse the condition in many patients

  • Patients can develop increasing difficulty with concentration and memory as well as experience general slowing of mental processes in late stages of HAND

    • At the same time, the patient may develop leg weakness and a loss of balance

  • Brains of these patients have undergone some shrinkage

  • Neurological effects of AIDS in patients

    • loss of neurons

    • abnormalities in white matter

    • injury to cellular structures involving in interneuron signaling

      • may be related to inflammation and abnormalities with blood vessels

  • Highly active CART is effective in reducing the incidence of severe HAND

    • Such treatment can reverse cognitive abnormalities attributed to brain HIV infection

  • Peripheral neuropathy: nerve injury in the extremities that results in the disease or dysfunction of one or more peripheral nerves

    • Causes discomfort ranging from tingling to burning to severe pain

    • Virus triggers sensory neuropathy by releasing neurotoxins

    • This reaction has been unmasked by antiretroviral drugs that produce mitochondrial toxins

      • Makes neuropathies more frequent and serious

  • Rare opportunistic infections and malignancies are seen more frequently in HIV patients due to immunodeficiency

    • CART greatly reduced the incidence of most of these kinds of infections

Neurological Trauma

  • Traumatic brain & spinal cord injuries can lead to significant disabilities and death

  • Methods to hold off severe neurological damage caused by trauma exist

    • Accomplished by working to prevent secondary pathogenesis

      • secondary pathogenesis: damage that occurs after the initial injury

    • Support regeneration & repair

    • Refine & optimize rehabilitation techniques

Traumatic Brain Injury

  • The main concern is brain pressure

    • It is monitored to prevent bleeding or swelling

  • Treatments for increased intracranial pressure include:

    • the removal of cerebrospinal fluid

    • moderate hyperventilation to decrease blood volume

    • drugs to reduce cellular metabolism

    • removal of water from injured tissue

  • Lesions can consist of surface bleeding or in-brain bleeding

    • This causes the formation of bruises called contusions

      • Contusions can increase brain pressure and contribute to the development of post-traumatic epilepsy

  • Blood leaking from vessels and touching the brain tissue causes localized pressure and reduced cerebral blood flow

    • Blood itself can be also toxic to brain cells

  • Decompressive craniectomy: removal of part of the skull to allow the brain space to swell

    • This is used as a last resort

  • Administering rogesterone cut the number of deaths in severely injured patients by 50%

    • Functional recovery improved by 30 days in moderately injured individuals

  • Treatments of injury-induced reduction of cerebral blood flow are drugs that increase arterial blood pressure

    • These treatments result in an increase in blood flow with the reduction of intracranial pressure

      • Allows more blood to reach vital areas

Spinal Cord Injury

  • Methylprednisolone: the only FDA-approved treatment for spinal cord injury

    • Studies showed some recovery when those with spinal cord injuries got a high IV dose of methylprednisolone within 8 hours of injury

  • After a spinal cord injury, animals can regain the ability to bear their weight and walk at various speeds on a treadmill belt

    • The level of recovery depends a lot on whether the tasks are practiced after injury

  • New nerve cells can be born in the adult brain

    • But these are not sufficient to help the injured brain regenerate

Pain

Treating Pain

  • Local anesthesia: loss of sensation in a limited area

    • These temporarily interrupt the action of all nerve fibers by interfering with sodium channels

    • Examples of local anesthesia include novocaine and lidocaine

      • Topical lidocaine is effective where a light touch to the skin can produce severe pain in neuropathy

  • Analgesia: loss of pain sensation

  • There are 5 main types of analgesics (painkillers)

    • Nonopioids: aspirin and NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs)

      • Examples include ibuprofen and naproxen

      • NSAIDs are useful for treating mild to moderate pain, arthritis, and post-operative pain

        • NSAIDs work by inhibiting the cyclooxygenase enzymes that make prostaglandin

          • Moderate pain can be treated by combining a mild opioid with aspirin or an NSAID

    • Opioids- analgesics that work by binding to opioid receptors

      • Examples include morphine and codeine

      • They are the most potent painkillers and are used for severe pain

        • Adverse side effects include respiratory depression and constipation

        • Opioids have a high potential for abuse

    • Antiepileptic agents: used for treating epilepsy but are also used to treat neuropathic pain and fibromyalgia

      • Examples include gabapentin and topiramate

      • Antiepileptic and antidepressants are useful for treating neuropathic pain coming from injury to the nervous system

        • Includes neuropathy caused by diabetic neuropathy, damage from high blood sugar, nerve pain or numbness from viruses, phantom limb pain, and post-stroke pain

    • Antidepressants: used for treating depression, chronic, and neuropathic pain

      • Examples include amitriptyline, duloxetine

      • Best results come with using antidepressants that regulate serotonin and norepinephrine

        • SSRIs don’t help relieve neuropathic pain

    • Acetaminophen: has analgesic properties but does not reduce inflammation

      • This is the active ingredient in tylenol

The Body’s Pain Control System

  • Opioid receptors are concentrated in the spinal cord

    • This finding led to use of injections of opioids into cerebrospinal fluid without causing paralysis, numbness, or other side effects

    • Injecting morphine into the spinal cord produced large pain control in animal tests

  • Nociceptors: peripheral nerve fibers that initially respond to an injury stimulus

    • Many ion channels and receptors are predominantly or exclusively expressed by nociceptors

  • Adverse side effects of drugs arise from the widespread location of molecules targeted by analgesics

    • Constipation results from morphine’s action on opioid receptors in the gut

  • New painkillers that only target nociceptors will have fewer side effects

    • One specialized receptor channel is activated by capsaicin

      • Capsaicin is the pungent chemical responsible for spice in hot peppers

    • Another receptor channel is activated by mustard oil

    • Blocking the activity of many receptors like these has proven effective

      • This suggests that the creation of drugs targeting these molecules in humans has great value for the treatment of acute and persistent pain

  • The topical application of capsaicin has recently been approved for some neuropathic pain conditions

    • Capsaicin kills the sensing portion of pain fibers

      • But these sensory areas will regenerate, so the process needs to be repeated

  • Pain is in the brain, not in nociceptors that respond to injury

    • Pain involves emotional factors

    • Placebos and hypnosis can significantly reduce pain

      • This shows the importance of psychological factors

Seizures and Epilepsy

  • Seizures: occur due to sudden, disorderly changes in interconnected brain neurons

    • They can alter one or morebrain functions

    • Seizures are associated with epilepsy

  • Epilepsy: a chronic neurological disorder characterized by the occurrence of unprovoked seizures

    • Epilepsy can start at any age

    • Idiopathic epilepsies: epilepsies arising from uncertain or unknown cause

      • Idiopathic epilepsies are probably due to the inheritance of 1+ mutant genes

        • These genes are often mutant ion channel genes

    • Symptomatic epilepsies: epilepsies with a known or presumed cause

      • Symptomatic epilepsies can result from a wide variety of brain diseases or injuries including:

        • Birth trauma

        • Head injury

        • Neurodegenerative disease

        • Brain infection

        • Brain tumor

        • Stroke

  • There are two main types of epilepsies

    • Generalized epilepsy: characterized by the loss of consciousness and range of behavioral changes including convulsions and sudden changes in muscle tone

      • Generalized epilepsy occurs when there is simultaneous excessive electrical activity over a wide area of the brain

        • This often involves thalamus and cerebral cortex

      • Generalized epilepsy is easier to treat

        • Up to 80% of patients become seizure-free with antiepileptic drugs

    • Partial epilepsy: the individual maintains consciousness or has altered awareness and behavioral changes

      • Partial epilepsy can produce

        • localized visual, auditory, skin sensory disturbances

        • repetitive uncontrolled movements

        • confused, automatic behaviors

      • Arises from excessive electrical activity in one area of the brain

        • This is restricted to the cortical or hippocampal area

      • Partial epilepsies are harder to treat

        • Sometimes a combination of drugs is necessary

  • The principal targets of antiepileptic drugs are ion channels or neurotransmitter receptors

  • Surgery is an option for patients with specific partial seizures who don’t respond to antiepileptic drugs

    • Electrical recordings of brain activity from patients allow for the precise localization of the brain area where seizures originate from

    • Improvement or complete remission of seizures occurs for at least several years after the surgery

  • Electrical stimulation therapy: an implanted device delivers small bursts of electrical energy to the brain via the vagus nerve on the side of the neck

    • Vagal nerve stimulation has been shown to reduce the frequency of partial seizures in many patients

Stroke

  • Stroke: occurs when a blood vessel bringing oxygen and nutrients bursts or is clogged by a blood clot or some other particle

    • This causes the brain to be deprived of blood

      • Neurons downstream of the blockage can die within minutes

  • The effects of stroke are location-dependent

    • It can cause permanent disorders like paralysis on one side of the body or the loss of speech

  • Until recently, if someone had a stroke, there were few treatment options outside of physical or speech therapy

    • Patients would live out their remaining months or years with a severe neurological impairment

  • tPA (tissue plasminogen activator): opens blocked vessels rapidly to restore circulation before oxygen loss causes permanent damage

  • Strokes can be prevented by controlling the risk factors

    • These risk factors include diet, exercise, and the use of certain drugs

  • Treatments for stroke include

    • Surgery to place arterial stents

      • keeps arteries open

      • clears clogs in neck arteries

    • Targeting treatment of heart disease to prevent the cutoff of blood supply

    • Anticoagulant drugs to reduce the likelihood of clots forming

    • Targeting mechanisms inside the neuron to slow down mass biochemically-induced neuron death

    • The use of the weakened limb by temporarily restricting the use of the other limb may help functional recovery following a stroke affecting the movement of one limb

    • Neural stem cells can help recovery even if administered several days after the injury

      • Administering growth factors may further enhance the benefits of stem cell transplantation