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The document discusses the Society for Neuroscience as the largest organization dedicated to understanding the brain and nervous system. It also covers topics such as neurons, brain development, sensation and perception, learning and memory, and movement.

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians dedicated to understanding the brain, spinal cord and peripheral nervous system. Its purposes are to advance neuroscience research, promote neuroscience education, and inform the public about new research findings.

The document covers topics such as the neuron, brain development, sensation and perception, learning and memory, movement, and more.

Brain Facts

A PRIMER ON THE BR AIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM

THE SOCIET Y FOR NEUROSCIENCE


Brain Facts
A PRIMER ON THE BR AIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM

THE SOCIET Y FOR NEUROSCIENCE


THE SOCIETY FOR NEUROSCIENCE
The Society for Neuroscience is the world’s largest organization of sci-
entists and physicians dedicated to understanding the brain, spinal cord
and peripheral nervous system.
Neuroscientists investigate the molecular and cellular levels of the
nervous system; the neuronal systems responsible for sensory and
motor function; and the basis of higher order processes, such as cog-
nition and emotion. This research provides the basis for understand-
ing the medical fields that are concerned with treating nervous system
disorders. These medical specialties include neurology, neurosurgery,
psychiatry and ophthalmology.
Founded in 1970, the Society has grown from 500 charter members
to more than 29,000 members. Regular members are residents of Canada,
Mexico and the United States—where more than 100 chapters organize
local activities. The Society’s membership also includes many scientists
from throughout the world, particularly Europe and Asia.
The purposes of the Society are to:
∫ Advance the understanding of the nervous system by bringing together
scientists from various backgrounds and by encouraging research in all
aspects of neuroscience.
∫ Promote education in the neurosciences.
∫ Inform the public about the results and implications of new research.
The exchange of scientific information occurs at an annual fall
meeting that presents more than 14,000 reports of new scientific
findings and includes more than 25,000 participants. This meeting, the
largest of its kind in the world, is the arena for the presentation of new
results in neuroscience.
The Society’s bimonthly journal, The Journal of Neuroscience, con-
tains articles spanning the entire range of neuroscience research and
has subscribers worldwide. A series of courses, workshops and sym-
posia held at the annual meeting promote the education of Society
members. The Neuroscience Newsletter informs members about Society
activities.
A major mission of the Society is to inform the public about the
progress and benefits of neuroscience research. The Society provides
information about neuroscience to school teachers and encourages its
members to speak to young people about the human brain and nervous
system.
Brain Facts

INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

THE NEURON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Neurotransmitters ∫ Second Messengers

BRAIN DEVELOPMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Birth of Neurons and Brain Wiring ∫ Paring Back ∫ Critical Periods

SENSATION AND PERCEPTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12


Vision ∫ Hearing ∫ Taste and Smell ∫ Touch and Pain

LEARNING AND MEMORY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

MOVEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

SLEEP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
The Stu∑ of Sleep ∫ Sleep Disorders ∫ How is Sleep Regulated?

STRESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
The Immediate Response ∫ Chronic Stress

AGING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Aging Neurons ∫ Intellectual Capacity

ADVANCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Parkinson’s Disease ∫ Pain ∫ Epilepsy ∫ Major Depression
Manic-Depressive Illness

CHALLENGES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Addiction ∫ Alzheimer’s Disease ∫ Learning Disorders
Stroke ∫ Neurological Trauma ∫ Anxiety Disorders
Schizophrenia ∫ Neurological AIDS ∫ Multiple Sclerosis
Down Syndrome ∫ Huntington’s Disease ∫ Tourette Syndrome
Brain Tumors ∫ Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

NEW DIAGNOSTIC METHODS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43


Imaging Techniques ∫ Gene Diagnosis

POTENTIAL THERAPIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
New Drugs ∫ Trophic Factors ∫ Cell and Gene Therapy

GLOSSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Introduction

I
t sets humans apart from all other species by allowing us disease mechanisms and is beginning to suggest new treatments.
to achieve the wonders of walking on the moon and com- With the mapping of the human genome, neuroscientists
posing masterpieces of literature, art and music. Through- will be able to make more rapid progress in identifying genes that
out recorded time, the human brain—a spongy, three- either contribute to human neurological disease or that directly
pound mass of fatty tissue—has been compared to a cause disease. Mapping animal genomes will aid the search for
telephone switchboard and a supercomputer. genes that regulate and control many complex behaviors.
But the brain is much more complicated than any of these ∫ Brain Plasticity. Scientists began to uncover the molecular
devices, a fact scientists confirm almost daily with each new bases of neural plasticity, revealing how learning and memory
discovery. The extent of the brain’s capabilities is unknown, but occur and how declines might be reversed. It also is leading to
it is the most complex living structure known in the universe. new approaches to the treatment of chronic pain.
This single organ controls all body activities, ranging from ∫ New Drugs. Researchers gained new insights into the mech-
heart rate and sexual function to emotion, learning and mem- anisms of molecular neuropharmacology, which provides a new
ory. The brain is even thought to influence the response to dis- understanding of the mechanisms of addiction. These advances
ease of the immune system and to determine, in part, how well also have led to new treatments for depression and obsessive-
people respond to medical treatments. Ultimately, it shapes our compulsive disorder.
thoughts, hopes, dreams and imagination. In short, the brain is ∫ Imaging. Revolutionary imaging techniques, including mag-
what makes us human. netic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography,
Neuroscientists have the daunting task of deciphering the now reveal brain systems underlying attention, memory and
mystery of this most complex of all machines: how as many as emotions and indicate dynamic changes that occur in schizo-
a trillion nerve cells are produced, grow and organize them- phrenia.
selves into e∑ective, functionally active systems that ordinarily ∫ Cell Death. The discovery of how and why neurons die, as
remain in working order throughout a person’s lifetime. well as the discovery of stem cells, which divide and form new
The motivation of researchers is twofold: to understand neurons, has many clinical applications. This has dramatically
human behavior better—from how we learn to why people improved the outlook for reversing the e∑ects of injury both in
have trouble getting along together—and to discover ways to the brain and spinal cord. The first e∑ective treatments for
prevent or cure many devastating brain disorders. stroke and spinal cord injury based on these advances have been
The more than 1,000 disorders of the brain and nervous brought to clinical practice.
system result in more hospitalizations than any other disease ∫ Brain Development. New principles and molecules respon-
group, including heart disease and cancer. Neurological illnesses sible for guiding nervous system development now give scien-
a∑ect more than 50 million Americans annually at costs exceed- tists a better understanding of certain disorders of childhood.
ing $400 billion. In addition, mental disorders, excluding drug Together with the discovery of stem cells, these advances are
and alcohol problems, strike 44 million adults a year at a cost pointing to novel strategies for helping the brain or spinal cord
of some $148 billion. regain functions lost to diseases.
However, during the congressionally designated Decade of Federal neuroscience research funding of more than $4 bil-
the Brain, which ended in 2000, neuroscience made significant lion annually and private support should vastly expand our
discoveries in these areas: knowledge of the brain in the years ahead.
∫ Genetics. Key disease genes were identified that underlie sev- This book only provides a glimpse of what is known about
eral neurodegenerative disorders—including Alzheimer’s dis- the nervous system, the disorders of the brain and some of the
ease, Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and amyotrophic exciting avenues of research that promise new therapies for
lateral sclerosis. This has provided new insights into underlying many neurological diseases.

2
THE BRAIN. Cerebral cortex
(above). This part of the brain is
divided into four sections: the
Motor cortex Sensory cortex
occipital lobe, the temporal
lobe, the parietal lobe and the
Frontal lobe
frontal lobe. Functions, such as
Parietal lobe
vision, hearing and speech, are
distributed in selected regions.
Some regions are associated
Occipital lobe
with more than one function.
Major internal structures
Temporal lobe (below). The (1) forebrain is
credited with the highest intel-
lectual functions—thinking,
planning and problem-solving.
The hippocampus is involved in
memory. The thalamus serves as
a relay station for almost all of
Cerebrum
the information coming into the
Thalamus
brain. Neurons in the hypothala-

Hypothalamus mus serve as relay stations for


internal regulatory systems by
monitoring information coming
1 Forebrain
in from the autonomic nervous
system and commanding the
body through those nerves and
Amygdala
the pituitary gland. On the
Hippocampus
upper surface of the (2) mid-
2 Midbrain brain are two pairs of small
Pons
hills, colliculi, collections of
Cerebellum
3 Hindbrain Spinal cord
cells that relay specific sensory
Medulla
oblongata information from sense organs
to the brain. The (3) hindbrain
consists of the pons and
medulla oblongata, which help
control respiration and heart

THE TOLL OF SELECTED BRAIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM DISORDERS* rhythms, and the cerebellum,
which helps control movement
Condition Total Cases Costs Per Year as well as cognitive processes
Hearing Loss 28 million $ 56 billion that require precise timing.
All Depressive Disorders 18.8 million $ 44 billion
Alzheimer’s Disease 4 million $ 100 billion
Stroke 4 million $ 30 billion
Schizophrenia 3 million $ 32.5 billion
Parkinson’s Disease 1.5 million $ 15 billion
Traumatic Head Injury 1 million $ 48.3 billion
Multiple Sclerosis 350,000 $ 7 billion
Spinal Cord Injury 250,000 $ 10 billion

* Estimates provided by the National Institutes of Health and voluntary organizations.

3
The Neuron

specialized cell designed to transmit infor- bind to receptors on the surface of the target neuron.

A
mation to other nerve cells, muscle or gland These receptors act as on and o∑ switches for the next cell.
cells, the neuron is the basic working unit of Each receptor has a distinctly shaped part that exactly matches
the brain. The brain is what it is because of a particular chemical messenger. A neurotransmitter fits into
the structural and functional properties of this region in much the same way as a key fits into an automo-
neurons. The brain contains between one bil- bile ignition. And when it does, it alters the neuron’s outer
lion and one trillion neurons. membrane and triggers a change, such as the contraction of a
The neuron consists of a cell body containing the nucleus muscle or increased activity of an enzyme in the cell.
and an electricity-conducting fiber, the axon, which also gives Knowledge of neurotransmitters in the brain and the action
rise to many smaller axon branches before ending at nerve ter- of drugs on these chemicals—gained largely through the study
minals. Synapses, from the Greek words meaning to “clasp of animals—is one of the largest fields in neuroscience. Armed
together,” are the contact points where one neuron communi- with this information, scientists hope to understand the circuits
cates with another. Other cell processes, dendrites, Greek for responsible for disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkin-
the branches of a tree, extend from the neuron cell body and son’s disease. Sorting out the various chemical circuits is vital
receive messages from other neurons. The dendrites and cell to understanding how the brain stores memories, why sex is such
body are covered with synapses formed by the ends of axons of a powerful motivation and what is the biological basis of men-
other neurons. tal illness.
Neurons signal by transmitting electrical impulses along
their axons that can range in length from a tiny fraction of an Neurotransmitters
inch to three or more feet. Many axons are covered with a lay- Acetylcholine The first neurotransmitter to be identified 70
ered insulating myelin sheath, made of specialized cells, that years ago, was acetylcholine (ACh). This chemical is released
speeds the transmission of electrical signals along the axon. by neurons connected to voluntary muscles (causing them to
Nerve impulses involve the opening and closing of ion chan- contract) and by neurons that control the heartbeat. ACh also
nels, water-filled molecular tunnels that pass through the cell serves as a transmitter in many regions of the brain.
membrane and allow ions—electrically charged atoms—or ACh is formed at the axon terminals. When an action
small molecules to enter or leave the cell. The flow of these ions potential arrives at the terminal, the electrically charged cal-
creates an electrical current that produces tiny voltage changes cium ion rushes in, and ACh is released into the synapse and
across the membrane. attaches to ACh receptors. In voluntary muscles, this opens
The ability of a neuron to fire depends on a small dif- sodium channels and causes the muscle to contract. ACh is
ference in electrical charge between the inside and outside of then broken down and re-synthesized in the nerve terminal.
the cell. When a nerve impulse begins, a dramatic reversal Antibodies that block the receptor for ACh cause myasthenia
occurs at one point on the cell’s membrane. The change, called gravis, a disease characterized by fatigue and muscle weakness.
an action potential, then passes along the membrane of the axon Much less is known about ACh in the brain. Recent dis-
at speeds up to several hundred miles an hour. In this way, a coveries suggest, however, that it may be critical for normal
neuron may be able to fire impulses scores or even hundreds attention, memory and sleep. Since ACh-releasing neurons die
of times every second. in Alzheimer’s patients, finding ways to restore this neuro-
On reaching the ends of an axon, these voltage changes transmitter is one goal of current research.
trigger the release of neurotransmitters, chemical messengers. Amino Acids Certain amino acids, widely distributed
Neurotransmitters are released at nerve ending terminals and throughout the body and the brain, serve as the building blocks

4
of proteins. However, it is now apparent that certain amino Glutamate or aspartate activate N-methyl-D-aspartate
acids can also serve as neurotransmitters in the brain. (NMDA) receptors, which have been implicated in activities
The neurotransmitters glutamate and aspartate act as exci- ranging from learning and memory to development and speci-
tatory signals. Glycine and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) fication of nerve contacts in a developing animal. The stimula-
inhibit the firing of neurons. The activity of GABA is increased tion of NMDA receptors may promote beneficial changes in
by benzodiazepine (Valium) and by anticonvulsant drugs. In the brain, whereas overstimulation can cause nerve cell damage
Huntington’s disease, a hereditary disorder that begins during or cell death in trauma and stroke.
mid-life, the GABA-producing neurons in the brain centers Key questions remain about this receptor’s precise structure,
coordinating movement degenerate, thereby causing incontrol- regulation, location and function. For example, developing
lable movements. drugs to block or stimulate activity at NMDA receptors holds

NEURON. A neuron fires by


transmitting electrical signals
along its axon. When signals
reach the end of the axon, they
trigger the release of neuro-
transmitters that are stored in
Dendrites
pouches called vesicles. Neuro-
transmitters bind to receptor
molecules that are present on
Nucleus
the surfaces of adjacent neu-
rons. The point of virtual contact
is known as the synapse.

Cell body Axon

Myelin sheath

Nerve impulse Axon

Vesicle

Direction
Synapse of impulse

Axon
terminals

Dendrite
of receiving
Neurotransmitters
neuron
Receptor molecules

5
promise for improving brain function and treating neurologi- more complex combinations of amino acids.)
cal disorders. But this work is still in the early stage. In 1973, scientists discovered receptors for opiates on neu-
Catecholamines Dopamine and norepinephrine are widely rons in several regions in the brain that suggested the brain
present in the brain and peripheral nervous system. Dopamine, must make substances very similar to opium. Shortly thereafter,
which is present in three circuits in the brain, controls move- scientists made their first discovery of an opiate produced by
ment, causes psychiatric symptoms such as psychosis and reg- the brain that resembles morphine, an opium derivative used
ulates hormonal responses. medically to kill pain. They named it enkephalin, literally mean-
The dopamine circuit that regulates movement has been ing “in the head.” Subsequently, other opiates known as endor-
directly related to disease. The brains of people with Parkinson’s phins—from endogenous morphine—were discovered.
disease—with symptoms of muscle tremors, rigidity and The precise role of the opioids in the body is unclear. A
di≈culty in moving—have practically no dopamine. Thus, plausible guess is that enkephalins are released by brain neurons
medical scientists found that the administration of levodopa, a in times of stress to minimize pain and enhance adaptive behav-
substance from which dopamine is synthesized, is an e∑ective ior. The presence of enkephalins may explain, for example, why
treatment for Parkinson’s, allowing patients to walk and per- injuries received during the stress of combat often are not
form skilled movements successfully. noticed until hours later.
Another dopamine circuit is thought to be important for Opioids and their receptors are closely associated with path-
cognition and emotion; abnormalities in this system have been ways in the brain that are activated by painful or tissue-damag-
implicated in schizophrenia. Because drugs that block dopamine ing stimuli. These signals are transmitted to the central nervous
receptors in the brain are helpful in diminishing psychotic system—the brain and spinal cord—by special sensory nerves,
symptoms, learning more about dopamine is important to small myelinated fibers and tiny unmyelinated or C fibers.
understanding mental illness. Scientists have discovered that some C fibers contain a pep-
In a third circuit, dopamine regulates the endocrine sys- tide called substance P that causes the sensation of burning pain.
tem. It directs the hypothalamus to manufacture hormones and The active component of chili peppers, capsaicin, causes the
hold them in the pituitary gland for release into the blood- release of substance P.
stream, or to trigger the release of hormones held within cells Trophic factors Researchers have discovered several small
in the pituitary. proteins in the brain that are necessary for the development,
Nerve fibers containing norepinephrine are present through- function and survival of specific groups of neurons. These small
out the brain. Deficiencies in this transmitter occur in patients proteins are made in brain cells, released locally in the brain,
with Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and those with and bind to receptors expressed by specific neurons. Researchers
Korsako∑’s syndrome, a cognitive disorder associated with chronic also have identified genes that code for receptors and are
alcoholism. Thus, researchers believe norepinephrine may play involved in the signaling mechanisms of trophic factors. These
a role in both learning and memory. Norepinephrine also is findings are expected to result in a greater understanding of
secreted by the sympathetic nervous system in the periphery to how trophic factors work in the brain. This information also
regulate heart rate and blood pressure. Acute stress increases should prove useful for the design of new therapies for brain
the release of norepinephrine. disorders of development and for degenerative diseases, includ-
Serotonin This neurotransmitter is present in many tissues, ing Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease.
particularly blood platelets and the lining of the digestive tract Hormones After the nervous system, the endocrine system
and the brain. Serotonin was first thought to be involved in is the second great communication system of the body. The
high blood pressure because it is present in blood and induces pancreas, kidney, heart and adrenal gland are sources of hor-
a very powerful contraction of smooth muscles. In the brain, it mones. The endocrine system works in large part through the
has been implicated in sleep, mood, depression and anxiety. pituitary that secretes hormones into the blood. Because endor-
Because serotonin controls the di∑erent switches a∑ecting var- phins are released from the pituitary gland into the blood-
ious emotional states, scientists believe these switches can be stream, they might also function as endocrine hormones. Hor-
manipulated by analogs, chemicals with molecular structures mones activate specific receptors in target organs that release
similar to serotonin. Drugs that alter serotonin’s action, such as other hormones into the blood, which then act on other tissues,
fluoxetine (Prozac), have relieved symptoms of depression and the pituitary itself and the brain. This system is very important
obsessive-compulsive disorder. for the activation and control of basic behavioral activities such
Peptides These chains of amino acids linked together, have as sex, emotion, response to stress and the regulation of body
been studied as neurotransmitters only in recent years. Brain functions, such as growth, energy use and metabolism. Actions
peptides called opioids act like opium to kill pain or cause sleepi- of hormones show the brain to be very malleable and capable
ness. (Peptides di∑er from proteins, which are much larger and of responding to environmental signals.

6
The brain contains receptors for both the thyroid hormone grip on all the pieces of this puzzle.
and the six classes of steroid hormones—estrogens, androgens, Gases Very recently, scientists identified a new class of neu-
progestins, glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids and vitamin D. The rotransmitters that are gases. These molecules—nitric oxide and
receptors are found in selected populations of neurons in the carbon monoxide—do not obey the “laws” governing neuro-
brain and relevant organs in the body. Thyroid and steroid hor- transmitter behavior. Being gases, they cannot be stored in any
mones bind to receptor proteins that in turn bind to the DNA structure, certainly not in synaptic storage structures. Instead,
genetic material and regulate action of genes. This can result in they are made by enzymes as they are needed. They are released
long-lasting changes in cellular structure and function. from neurons by di∑usion. And rather than acting at receptor
In response to stress and changes in our biological clocks, sites, they simply di∑use into adjacent neurons and act upon
such as day-and-night cycles and jet-lag, hormones enter the chemical targets, which may be enzymes.
blood and travel to the brain and other organs. In the brain, Though only recently characterized, nitric oxide has
they alter the production of gene products that participate in already been shown to play important roles. For example, nitric
synaptic neurotransmission as well as the structure of brain oxide neurotransmission governs erection in neurons of the
cells. As a result, the circuitry of the brain and its capacity for penis. In nerves of the intestine, it governs the relaxation that
neurotransmission are changed over a course of hours to days. contributes to normal movements of digestion. In the brain,
In this way, the brain adjusts its performance and control of nitric oxide is the major regulator of the intracellular messen-
behavior in response to a changing environment. Hormones are ger molecule—cyclic GMP. In conditions of excess glutamate
important agents of protection and adaptation, but stress and release, as occurs in stroke, neuronal damage following the
stress hormones also can alter brain function, including learn- stroke may be attributable in part to nitric oxide. Exact func-
ing. Severe and prolonged stress can cause permanent brain tions for carbon monoxide have not yet been shown.
damage.
Reproduction is a good example of a regular, cyclic process Second messengers
driven by circulating hormones: The hypothalamus produces Recently recognized substances that trigger biochemical com-
gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), a peptide that acts on munication within cells, second messengers may be responsi-
cells in the pituitary. In both males and females, this causes two ble for long-term changes in the nervous system. They convey
hormones—the follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and the the chemical message of a neurotransmitter (the first messen-
luteinizing hormone (LH)—to be released into the bloodstream. ger) from the cell membrane to the cell’s internal biochemical
In males, these hormones are carried to receptors on cells in the machinery. Second messengers take anywhere from a few milli-
testes where they release the male hormone testosterone into seconds to minutes to transmit a message.
the bloodstream. In females, FSH and LH act on the ovaries An example of the initial step in the activation of a second
and cause the release of the female hormones estrogen and prog- messenger system involves adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the
esterone. In turn, the increased levels of testosterone in males chemical source of energy in cells. ATP is present throughout
and estrogen in females act back on the hypothalamus and pitu- the cell. For example, when norepinephrine binds to its recep-
itary to decrease the release of FSH and LH. The increased lev- tors on the surface of the neuron, the activated receptor binds
els also induce changes in cell structure and chemistry that lead G-proteins on the inside of the membrane. The activated G-
to an increased capacity to engage in sexual behavior. protein causes the enzyme adenylyl cyclase to convert ATP to
Scientists have found statistically and biologically signi- cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). The second messenger,
ficant di∑erences between the brains of men and women that cAMP, exerts a variety of influences on the cell, ranging from
are similar to sex di∑erences found in experimental animals. changes in the function of ion channels in the membrane to
These include di∑erences in the size and shape of brain struc- changes in the expression of genes in the nucleus, rather than
tures in the hypothalamus and the arrangement of neurons in acting as a messenger between one neuron and another. cAMP
the cortex and hippocampus. Some functions can be attributed is called a second messenger because it acts after the first mes-
to these sex di∑erences, but much more must be learned in senger, the transmitter chemical, has crossed the synaptic space
terms of perception, memory and cognitive ability. Although and attached itself to a receptor.
di∑erences exist, the brains of men and women are more sim- Second messengers also are thought to play a role in the
ilar than they are di∑erent. manufacture and release of neurotransmitters, intracellular
Recently, several teams of researchers have found anatom- movements, carbohydrate metabolism in the cerebrum—the
ical di∑erences between the brains of heterosexual and homo- largest part of the brain consisting of two hemispheres—and
sexual men. Research suggests that hormones and genes act the processes of growth and development. Direct e∑ects of
early in life to shape the brain in terms of sex-related di∑erences these substances on the genetic material of cells may lead to
in structure and function, but scientists still do not have a firm long-term alterations of behavior.

7
Brain development

T
hree to four weeks after conception, one of the place to a final destination in the brain. They collect together
two cell layers of the gelatin-like human embryo, to form each of the various brain structures and acquire specific
now about one-tenth of an inch long, starts to ways of transmitting nerve messages. Their processes, or axons,
thicken and build up along the middle. As this grow long distances to find and connect with appropriate part-
flat neural plate grows, parallel ridges, similar to ners, forming elaborate and specific circuits. Finally, sculpting
the creases in a paper airplane, rise across its action eliminates redundant or improper connections, honing
surface. Within a few days, the ridges fold in toward each other the specificity of the circuits that remain. The result is the cre-
and fuse to form the hollow neural tube. The top of the tube ation of a precisely elaborated adult network of 100 billion neu-
thickens into three bulges that form the hindbrain, midbrain rons capable of a body movement, a perception, an emotion or
and forebrain. The first signs of the eyes and then the hemi- a thought.
spheres of the brain appear later. Knowing how the brain is put together is essential for
How does all this happen? Although many of the mecha- understanding its ability to reorganize in response to external
nisms of human brain development remain secrets, neurosci- influences or to injury. These studies also shed light on brain
entists are beginning to uncover some of these complex steps functions, such as learning and memory. Brain diseases, such as
through studies of the roundworm, fruit fly, frog, zebrafish, schizophrenia and mental retardation, are thought to result
mouse, rat, chicken, cat and monkey. from a failure to construct proper connections during develop-
Many initial steps in brain development are similar across ment. Neuroscientists are beginning to discover some general
species, while later steps are different. By studying these simi- principles to understand the processes of development, many
larities and differences, scientists can learn how the human brain of which overlap in time.
develops and how brain abnormalities, such as mental retarda-
tion and other brain disorders, can be prevented or treated. Birth of neurons and brain wiring
Neurons are initially produced along the central canal in The embryo has three primary layers that undergo many inter-
the neural tube. These neurons then migrate from their birth- actions in order to evolve into organ, bone, muscle, skin or

BRAIN DEVELOPMENT. The human brain and nervous system begin to develop at three weeks’ gestation as the closing neural tube (left).
By four weeks, major regions of the human brain can be recognized in primitive form, including the forebrain, midbrain, hindbrain, and optic vesicle
(from which the eye develops). Irregular ridges, or convolutions, are clearly seen by six months.

Forebrain Hindbrain
Midbrain
Future
forebrain Spinal cord
Hindbrain
Optic vesicle

Future 4 WEEKS 7 WEEKS


spinal
cord
Forebrain

3 WEEKS 3 MONTHS 6 MONTHS 9 MONTHS

8
neural tissue. The skin and neural tissue arise from a single become the motor neurons that control muscles. An even lower
layer, known as the ectoderm, in response to signals provided concentration promotes the formation of interneurons that
by an adjacent layer, known as the mesoderm. relay messages to other neurons, not muscles.
A number of molecules interact to determine whether the A combination of signals also determines the type of chem-
ectoderm becomes neural tissue or develops in another way to ical messages, or neurotransmitters, that a neuron will use to
become skin. Studies of spinal cord development in frogs show communicate with other cells. For some, such as motor neu-
that one major mechanism depends on specific molecules that rons, the choice is invariant, but for others it is a matter of
inhibit the activity of various proteins. If nothing interrupts the choice. Scientists found that when certain neurons are main-
activity of such proteins, the tissue becomes skin. If other mol- tained in a dish without any other cell type, they produce the
ecules, which are secreted from mesodermal tissue, block pro- neurotransmitter norepinephrine. In contrast, if the same neu-
tein signaling, then the tissue becomes neural. rons are maintained with other cells, such as cardiac or heart
Once the ectodermal tissue has acquired its neural fate, tissue cells, they produce the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.
another series of signaling interactions determine the type of Since all neurons have genes containing the information for the
neural cell to which it gives rise. The mature nervous system production of these molecules, it is the turning on of a partic-
contains a vast array of cell types, which can be divided into two ular set of genes that begins the production of specific neuro-
main categories: the neurons, primarily responsible for signal- transmitters. Many researchers believe that the signal to engage
ing, and supporting cells called glial cells. the gene and, therefore, the final determination of the chemi-
Researchers are finding that the destiny of neural tissue cal messengers that a neuron produces, is influenced by factors
depends on a number of factors, including position, that define coming from the targets themselves.
the environmental signals to which the cells are exposed. For As neurons are produced, they move from the neural tube’s
example, a key factor in spinal cord development is a secreted ventricular zone, or inner surface, to near the border of the mar-
protein called sonic hedgehog that is similar to a signaling pro- ginal zone, or the outer surface. After neurons stop dividing,
tein found in flies. The protein, initially secreted from meso- they form an intermediate zone where they gradually accumu-
dermal tissue lying beneath the developing spinal cord, marks late as the brain develops.
young neural cells that are directly adjacent to become a spe- The migration of neurons occurs in most structures of the
cialized class of glial cells. Cells further away are exposed to brain, but is particularly prominent in the formation of a large
lower concentrations of sonic hedgehog protein, and they cerebral cortex in primates, including humans. In this structure,

NEURON MIGRATION. A cross-


sectional view of the occipital
Outer surface
lobe (which processes vision) of
Fetal a three-month-old monkey fetus
monkey
brain brain (center) shows immature
neurons migrating along glial
fibers. These neurons make
Migrating
neuron transient connections with other
neurons before reaching their
destination. A single migrating
neuron, shown about 2,500
Migrating times its actual size (right), uses
zone
a glial fiber as a guiding
sca≈old. To move, it needs ad-
hesion molecules, which recog-
Glial
fiber
nize the pathway, and contrac-
tile proteins to propel it along.

Inner surface

9
neurons slither from the place of origin near the ventricular sur- corresponding, and again related, human receptors.
face along nonneuronal fibers that form a trail to their proper Once axons reach their targets, they form synapses, which
destination. Proper neuron migration requires multiple mech- permit electric signals in the axon to jump to the next cell, where
anisms, including the recognition of the proper path and the they can either provoke or prevent the generation of a new sig-
ability to move long distances. One such mechanism for long nal. The regulation of this transmission at synapses, and the inte-
distance migration is the movement of neurons along elongated gration of inputs from the thousands of synapses each neuron
fibers that form transient scaffolding in the fetal brain. Many receives, are responsible for the astounding information-
external forces, such as alcohol, cocaine or radiation, prevent processing capabilities of the brain. For processing to occur prop-
proper neuronal migration and result in misplacement of cells, erly, the connections must be highly specific. Some specificity
which may lead to mental retardation and epilepsy. Further- arises from the mechanisms that guide each axon to its proper
more, mutations in genes that regulate migration have recently target area. Additional molecules mediate “target recognition”
been shown to cause some rare genetic forms of retardation and whereby the axon chooses the proper neuron, and often the
epilepsy in humans. proper part of the target, once it arrives at its destination. Few of
Once the neurons reach their final location, they must make these molecules have been identified. There has been more suc-
the proper connections for a particular function, such as vision cess, however, in identifying the ways in which the synapse forms
or hearing, to occur. They do this through their axons. These once the contact has been made. The tiny portion of the axon
stalk-like appendages can stretch out a thousand times longer that contacts the dendrite becomes specialized for the release of
than the cell body from which they arise. The journey of most neurotransmitters, and the tiny portion of the dendrite that
axons ends when they meet the branching areas, called den- receives the contact becomes specialized to receive and respond
drites, on other neurons. These target neurons can be located to the signal. Special molecules pass between the sending and
at a considerable distance, sometimes at opposite sides of the receiving cell to ensure that the contact is formed properly.
brain. In the case of a motor neuron, the axon may travel from
the spinal cord all the way down to a foot muscle. The linkup Paring back
sites, called synapses, are where messages are transferred from Following the period of growth, the network is pared back to
one neuron in a circuit to the next. create a more sturdy system. Only about one-half of the neu-
Axon growth is spearheaded by growth cones. These enlarge- rons generated during development survive to function in the
ments of the axon’s tip actively explore the environment as they adult. Entire populations of neurons are removed through
seek out their precise destinations. Researchers have discovered internal suicide programs initiated in the cells. The programs
that many special molecules help guide growth cones. Some are activated if a neuron loses its battle with other neurons to
molecules lie on the cells that growth cones contact, while oth- receive life-sustaining nutrients called trophic factors. These
ers are released from sources found near the growth cone. The factors are produced in limited quantities by target tissues. Each
growth cones, in turn, bear molecules that serve as receptors for type of trophic factor supports the survival of a distinct group
the environmental cues. The binding of particular signals with of neurons. For example, nerve growth factor is important for
its receptors tells the growth cone whether to move forward, sensory neuron survival. It has recently become clear that the
stop, recoil or change direction. internal suicide program is maintained into adulthood, and
Recently researchers have identified some of the molecules constantly held in check. Based on this idea, researchers have
that serve as cues and receptors. These molecules include pro- found that injuries and some neurodegenerative diseases kill
teins with names such as cadherin, netrin, semaphorin, ephrin, neurons not directly by the damage they inflict, but rather by
neuropilin and plexin. In most cases, these are families of activating the death program. This discovery, and its implica-
related molecules; for example there are at least 15 semapo- tion that death need not inevitably follow insult, have led to
horins and at least 10 ephrins. Perhaps the most remarkable new avenues for therapy.
result is that most of these are common to worms, insects and Brain cells also form too many connections at first. For
mammals, including humans. Each family is smaller in flies example, in primates, the projection from the two eyes to the
or worms than in mice or people, but their functions are quite brain initially overlaps, and then sorts out to separate territo-
similar. It has therefore been possible to use the simpler ani- ries devoted only to one or the other eye. Furthermore, in the
mals to gain knowledge that can be directly applied to young primate cerebral cortex, the connections between neu-
humans. For example, the first netrin was discovered in a rons are greater in number and twice as dense as an adult pri-
worm and shown to guide neurons around the worm’s “nerve mate. Communication between neurons with chemical and
ring.” Later, vertebrate netrins were found to guide axons electrical signals is necessary to weed out the connections. The
around the mammalian spinal cord. Worm receptors for connections that are active and generating electrical currents
netrins were then found and proved invaluable in finding the survive while those with little or no activity are lost.

10
SPINAL CORD AND NERVES. The
CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM mature central nervous system
Brain and spinal cord
(CNS) consists of the brain and
spinal cord. The brain sends
nerve signals to specific parts of
Cervical region
PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
the body through peripheral
Nerves extending from spinal cord
nerves, known as the peripheral
nervous system (PNS). Peripheral
nerves in the cervical region
Thoracic region
serve the neck and arms; those in
the thoracic region serve the
trunk; those in the lumbar region
serve the legs; and those in the
Peripheral nerves Lumbar region
sacral region serve the bowels
and bladder. The PNS consists of
the somatic nervous system that
connects voluntary skeletal mus-
Sacral region
cles with cells specialized to re-
spond to sensations, such as
touch and pain. The autonomic
nervous system is made of neu-
rons connecting the CNS with
internal organs. It is divided into
the sympathetic nervous system,
which mobilizes energy and
Spinal cord
Vertebrae resources during times of stress
and arousal, and the parasympa-
thetic nervous system, which
conserves energy and resources
during relaxed states.

Critical periods diminished use, the animal permanently loses useful vision in
The brain’s refining and building of the network in mammals, that eye. This gives cellular meaning to the saying “use it or lose
including humans, continues after birth. An organism’s interac- it.” Loss of vision is caused by the actual loss of functional con-
tions with its surroundings fine-tune connections. nections between that eye and neurons in the visual cortex. This
Changes occur during critical periods. These are windows of finding has led to earlier and better treatment of the eye disor-
time during development when the nervous system must obtain ders congenital cataracts and “crossed-eyes” in children.
certain critical experiences, such as sensory, movement or emo- Research also shows that enriched environments can bolster
tional input, to develop properly. Following a critical period, con- brain development during postnatal life. For example, studies
nections become diminished in number and less subject to show that animals brought up in toy-filled surroundings have more
change, but the ones that remain are stronger, more reliable and branches on their neurons and more connections than isolated ani-
more precise. Injury, sensory or social deprivation occurring at a mals. In one recent study, scientists found enriched environments
certain stage of postnatal life may affect one aspect of develop- resulted in more neurons in a brain area involved in memory.
ment, while the same injury at a different period may affect Scientists hope that new insights on development will lead
another aspect. In one example, a monkey is raised from birth to treatments for those with learning disabilities, brain damage
up to six months of age with one eyelid closed. As a result of and even neurodegenerative disorders or aging.

11
Sensation and perception

V
ision. This wonderful sense allows us to of the scene you are watching registers in your left hemisphere.
image the world around us from the genius A similar arrangement applies to movement and touch: each
of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling to half of the cerebrum is responsible for the opposite half of the
mist-filled vistas of a mountain range. Vision body.
is one of the most delicate and complicated Scientists know much about the way cells code visual infor-
of all the senses. mation in the retina, lateral geniculate nucleus—an intermedi-
It also is the most studied. About one-fourth of the brain ate point between the retina and visual cortex—and visual cor-
is involved in visual processing, more than for all other senses. tex. These studies give us the best knowledge so far about how
More is known about vision than any other vertebrate sensory the brain analyzes and processes information.
system, with most of the information derived from studies of The retina contains three stages of neurons. The first, the
monkeys and cats. layer of rods and cones, sends its signals to the middle layer,
Vision begins with the cornea, which does about three- which relays signals to the third layer. Nerve fibers from the
quarters of the focusing, and then the lens, which varies the third layer assemble to form the optic nerve. Each cell in the
focus. Both help produce a clear image of the visual world on middle or third layer receives input from many cells in the pre-
the retina, the sheet of photoreceptors, which process vision, vious layer. Any cell in the third layer thus receives signals—
and neurons lining the back of the eye. via the middle layer—from a cluster of many thousands of rods
As in a camera, the image on the retina is reversed: objects and cones that cover about one-square millimeter (the size of
to the right of center project images to the left part of the retina a thumb tack hole). This region is called the receptive field of
and vice versa. Objects above the center project to the lower the third-layer cell.
part and vice versa. The shape of the lens is altered by the mus- About 50 years ago, scientists discovered that the receptive
cles of the iris so near or far objects can be brought into focus field of such a cell is activated when light hits a tiny region in
on the retina. its receptive field center and is inhibited when light hits the part
Visual receptors, about 125 million in each eye, are neurons of the receptive field surrounding the center. If light covers the
specialized to turn light into electrical signals. They occur in entire receptive field, the cell reacts only weakly and perhaps
two forms. Rods are most sensitive to dim light and do not con- not at all.
vey the sense of color. Cones work in bright light and are Thus, the visual process begins with a comparison of the
responsible for acute detail, black and white and color vision. amount of light striking any small region of the retina and the
The human eye contains three types of cones that are sensitive amount of light around it. Located in the occipital lobe, the pri-
to red, green and blue but in combination convey information mary visual cortex—two millimeters thick (twice that of a
about all visible colors. dime) and densely packed with cells in many layers—receives
Primates, including humans, have well-developed vision messages from the lateral geniculate. In the middle layer, which
using two eyes. Visual signals pass from each eye along the mil- receives input from the lateral geniculate, scientists found pat-
lion or so fibers of the optic nerve to the optic chiasma where terns of responsiveness similar to those observed in the retina
some nerve fibers cross over, so both sides of the brain receive and lateral geniculate cells. Cells above and below this layer
signals from both eyes. Consequently, the left halves of both responded di∑erently. They preferred stimuli in the shape of
retinae project to the left visual cortex and the right halves pro- bars or edges. Further studies showed that di∑erent cells pre-
ject to the right visual cortex. ferred edges at particular angles, edges that moved or edges
The e∑ect is that the left half of the scene you are watch- moving in a particular direction.
ing registers in your right hemisphere. Conversely, the right half Although the process is not yet completely understood,

12
Third cell layer Middle cell layer Rods and Cones

Pupil

Rods

Cones

Lens

Retina Optic nerve

Visual cortex

Cornea Iris

Lateral geniculate nucleus

Optic chiasm

Optic nerve

Right visual field

Left visual field

Modified from Jane Hurd

VISION. The cornea and lens help produce a clear image of the visual world on the retina, the sheet of photoreceptors and neurons lining the back
of the eye. As in a camera, the image on the retina is reversed: objects to the right of center project images to the left part of the retina and vice
versa. The eye’s 125 million visual receptors—composed of rods and cones—turn light into electrical signals. Rods are most sensitive to dim light
and do not convey the sense of color; cones work in bright light and are responsible for acute detail, black and white and color vision. The human
eye contains three types of cones that are sensitive to red, green and blue but, in combination, convey information about all visible colors. Rods and
cones connect with a middle cell layer and third cell layer (see inset, above). Light passes through these two layers before reaching the rods and
cones. The two layers then receive signals from rods and cones before transmitting the signals onto the optic nerve, optic chiasm, lateral geniculate
nucleus and, finally, the visual cortex.

13
External ear Middle ear Inner ear
Auditory area

BONES OF THE MIDDLE EAR


Malleus Incus Stapes Oval
window

To brain

HEARING. From the chirping of


Auditory nerve
crickets to the roar of a rocket
engine, almost all of the thou- Cochlea
sands of single tones processed
by the human ear are heard by a
Tympanic
mechanism known as air con- membrane
Displacement of hair bundles
duction. In this process, sound Soundwaves
External
waves are first funneled auditory
through the external ear—the canal

pinna and the external auditory


canal—to the middle ear—the
Hair cell
tympanic membrane (eardrum) of cochlea
Pinna Released
that vibrates at di≈erent Nucleus
chemicals
Transmitters excite nerve
speeds. The malleus (hammer), and send
released
which is attached to the tym- impulses to
brain
panic membrane, transmits the
vibrations to the incus (anvil).
The vibrations are then passed
onto the stapes (stirrup) and recent findings suggest that visual signals are fed into at least three separate processing systems.
oval window that, in turn, pass One system appears to process information about shape; a second, color; and a third, movement,
them onto the inner ear. In the location and spatial organization. These findings of separate processing systems come from mon-
inner ear, the fluid-filled spiral key anatomical and physiological data. They are verified by human psychological studies showing
passage of the cochlea contains that the perception of movement, depth, perspective, the relative size of objects, the relative move-
cells with microscopic, hairlike ment of objects and shading and gradations in texture all depend primarily on contrasts in light
projections that respond to the intensity rather than in color.
vibrations produced by sound. Why movement and depth perception should be carried by only one processing system may
The hair cells, in turn, excite the be explained by a school of thought called Gestalt psychology. Perception requires various ele-
28,000 fibers of the auditory ments to be organized so that related ones are grouped together. This stems from the brain’s abil-
nerve that end in the medulla in ity to group the parts of an image together and also to separate images from one another and from
the brain. Auditory information their individual backgrounds.
flows via the thalamus to the How do all these systems produce the solid images you see? By extracting biologically rele-
temporal gyrus, the part of the vant information at each stage and associating firing patterns with past experience.
cerebral cortex involved in Vision studies also have led to better treatment for visual disorders. Information from research
receiving and perceiving sound. in cats and monkeys has improved the therapy for strabismus, or squint, a term for “cross-eye” or
wall-eye. Children with strabismus initially have good vision in each eye. But because they can-
not fuse the images in the two eyes, they tend to favor using one eye and often lose useful vision
in the other eye.
Vision can be restored but only during infancy or early childhood. Beyond the age of six or
so, the blindness becomes permanent. But until a few decades ago, ophthalmologists waited until

14
children reached the age of four before operating to align the Taste and smell
eyes, or prescribe exercises or an eye patch. Now strabismus is Although di∑erent, the two sensory experiences of taste and
corrected very early in life—before age four—when normal smell are intimately entwined. They are separate senses with
vision can still be restored. their own receptor organs. However, these two senses act
together to allow us to distinguish thousands of di∑erent
Hearing flavors. Alone, taste is a relatively focused sense concerned with
Often considered the most important sense for humans, hear- distinguishing among sweet, salty, sour and bitter. The interac-
ing allows us to communicate with each other by receiving tion between taste and smell explains why loss of the sense of
sounds and interpreting speech. It also gives us information smell apparently causes a serious reduction in the overall taste
vital to survival. For example, the sound of an oncoming train experience, which we call flavor.
tells us to stay clear of the railroad track. Tastes are detected by taste buds, special structures of which
Like the visual system, our hearing system distinguishes sev- every human has some 5,000. Taste buds are embedded within
eral qualities in the signal it detects. However, our hearing system papillae, or protuberances, located mainly on the tongue, with
does not blend di∑erent sounds, as the visual system does when others found in the back of the mouth and on the palate. Taste
two di∑erent wavelengths of substances stimulate hairs pro-
light are mixed to produce jecting from the sensory cells.
color. We can follow the sep- Taste and smell are two separate senses with Each taste bud consists of 50 to
arate melodic lines of several 100 sensory cells that respond
instruments as we listen to an their own sets of receptor organs, but they act to salts, acidity, sweet sub-
orchestra or rock band. stances and bitter compounds.
From the chirping of together to distinguish an enormous number of Some researchers add a fifth
crickets to the roar of a rocket category named umami, for the
engine, most of the sounds di≈erent flavors. taste of monosodium gluta-
processed by the ear are heard mate and related substances.
by a mechanism known as air conduction. In this process, sound Taste signals in the sensory cells are transferred by synapses
waves are first funneled through the externally visible part of the to the ends of nerve fibers, which send impulses along cranial
ear, the pinna (or external ear) and the external auditory canal to nerves to taste centers in the brain. From here, the impulses are
the tympanic membrane (eardrum) that vibrates at di∑erent relayed to other brain stem centers responsible for the basic
speeds. The malleus (hammer), which is attached to the tym- responses of acceptance or rejection of the tastes, and to the
panic membrane, transmits the vibrations to the incus (anvil). thalamus and on to the cerebral cortex for conscious perception
This structure passes them onto the stapes (stirrup) which deliv- of taste.
ers them, through the oval window, to the inner ear. Specialized smell receptor cells are located in a small patch
The fluid-filled spiral passages of each cochlea contain of mucus membrane lining the roof of the nose. Axons of these
16,000 hair cells whose microscopic, hairlike projections sensory cells pass through perforations in the overlying bone
respond to the vibrations produced by sound. The hair cells, in and enter two elongated olfactory bulbs lying on top of the bone.
turn, excite the 28,000 fibers of the auditory nerve that termi- The portion of the sensory cell that is exposed to odors pos-
nate in the medulla of the brain. Auditory information flows sesses hair-like cilia. These cilia contain the receptor sites that
via the thalamus to the temporal gyrus, the part of the cerebral are stimulated by odors carried by airborne molecules. The odor
cortex involved in receiving and perceiving sound. molecules dissolve in the mucus lining in order to stimulate
The brain’s analysis of auditory information follows a pat- receptor molecules in the cilia to start the smell response. An
tern similar to that of the visual system. Adjacent neurons odor molecule acts on many receptors to di∑erent degrees. Sim-
respond to tones of similar frequency. Some neurons respond ilarly, a receptor interacts with many di∑erent odor molecules
to only a small range of frequencies, others react to a wide to di∑erent degrees.
range; some react only to the beginning of a sound, others only Axons of the cells pass through perforations in the overly-
respond to the end. ing bone and enter two elongated olfactory bulbs lying on top
Speech sounds, however, may be processed di∑erently than of the bone. The pattern of activity set up in the receptor cells
others. Our auditory system processes all the signals that it is projected to the olfactory bulb, where it forms a spatial image
receives in the same way until they reach the primary auditory of the odor. Impulses created by this stimulation pass to smell
cortex in the temporal lobe of the brain. When speech sound centers, to give rise to conscious perceptions of odor in the
is perceived, the neural signal is funneled to the left hemisphere frontal lobe and emotional responses in the limbic system of
for processing in language centers. the brain.

15
SMELL AND TASTE. Specialized
receptors for smell are located
Nerve fibers to brain
in a patch of mucous membrane
Receptor cells
lining the roof of the nose. Each
Olfactory tract
cell has several fine hairlike
cilia containing receptor pro-
teins, which are stimulated by
odor molecules in the air, and a Olfactory
bulb
long fiber (axon), which passes
through perforations in the
overlying bone to enter the
olfactory bulb. Stimulated cells
Airborne odors
give rise to impulses in the
Cilia
fibers, which set up patterns in
the olfactory bulb that are
relayed to the brain’s frontal Food Taste bud pore
chemicals
lobe to give rise to smell per-
ception, and to the limbic sys-
tem to elicit emotional
responses. Tastes are detected
by special structures, taste
Tongue
buds, of which every human has
some 10,000. Taste buds are
Synapse
embedded within papillae (pro-
tuberances) mainly on the Taste (gustatory) nerve to brain

tongue, with a few located in


the back of the mouth and on
the palate. Each taste bud con-
sists of about 100 receptors that
respond to the four types of Touch and pain
stimuli—sweet, salty, sour and Touch is the sense by which we determine the characteristics of objects: size, shape and texture.
bitter—from which all tastes are We do this through touch receptors in the skin. In hairy skin areas, some receptors consist of webs
formed. A substance is tasted of sensory nerve cell endings wrapped around the hair bulbs. They are remarkably sensitive, being
when chemicals in foods dis- triggered when the hairs are moved. Other receptors are more common in non-hairy areas, such
solve in saliva, enter the pores as lips and fingertips, and consist of nerve cell endings that may be free or surrounded by bulb-
on the tongue and come in con- like structures.
tact with taste buds. Here they Signals from touch receptors pass via sensory nerves to the spinal cord, then to the thalamus
stimulate hairs projecting from and sensory cortex. The transmission of this information is highly topographic, meaning that the
the receptor cells and cause sig- body is represented in an orderly fashion at di∑erent levels of the nervous system. Larger areas of
nals to be sent from the cells, the cortex are devoted to sensations from the hands and lips; much smaller cortical regions rep-
via synapses, to cranial nerves resent less sensitive parts of the body.
and taste centers in the brain. Di∑erent parts of the body vary in their sensitivity to touch discrimination and painful stim-
uli according to the number and distribution of receptors. The cornea is several hundred times
more sensitive to painful stimuli than are the soles of the feet. The fingertips are good at touch
discrimination but the chest and back are less sensitive.
Until recently, pain was thought to be a simple message by which neurons sent electrical
impulses from the site of injury directly to the brain.
Recent studies show that the process is more complicated. Nerve impulses from sites of injury
that persist for hours, days or longer lead to changes in the nervous system that result in an
amplification and increased duration of the pain. These changes involve dozens of chemical mes-
sengers and receptors.

16
At the point of injury, nociceptors, special receptors, respond Pain messages can also be suppressed by a system of neu-
to tissue-damaging stimuli. Injury results in the release of rons that originate within the gray matter in the brainstem of
numerous chemicals at the site of damage and inflammation. the midbrain. This descending system sends messages to the dor-
One such chemical, prostaglandin, enhances the sensitivity of sal horn of the spinal cord where it suppresses the transmission
receptors to tissue damage and ultimately can result in more of pain signals to the higher brain centers. Some of these
intense pain sensations. It also contributes to the clinical con- descending systems use naturally occurring chemicals similar to
dition in which innocuous stimuli can produce pain (such as in opioids. The three major families of opioids—enkephalins,
sunburned skin) because the threshold of the nociceptor is endorphins and dynorphins—identified in the brain originate
significantly reduced. from three precursor proteins coded by three di∑erent genes.
Pain messages are transmitted to the spinal cord via small They act at multiple opioid receptors in the brain and spinal
myelinated fibers and C fibers—very small unmyelinated fibers. cord. This knowledge has led to new treatments for pain: Opiate-
Myelin is a covering around nerve fibers that helps them send like drugs injected into the space above the spinal cord provide
their messages more rapidly. long-lasting pain relief.
In the ascending system, the impulses are relayed from the Scientists are now using modern tools for imaging brain
spinal cord to several brain structures, including the thalamus structures in humans to determine the role of the higher cen-
and cerebral cortex, which are involved in the process by which ters of the brain in pain experience and how signals in these
“pain” messages become conscious experience. structures change with long-lasting pain.

PAIN. Messages about tissue


Message is received in the thalamus and cerebral cortex damage are picked up by recep-
tors and transmitted to the
spinal cord via small, myeli-
nated fibers and very small
Tissue-damaging stimulus unmyelinated fibers. From the
activates nociceptors
spinal cord, the impulses are
carried to the brainstem, thala-
mus and cerebral cortex and
ultimately perceived as pain.
These messages can be sup-
Descending pathway
pressed by a system of neurons
that originates in the gray
matter of the midbrain. This

Message carried descending pathway sends mes-


to spinal cord
sages to the spinal cord where it
suppresses the transmission of
tissue damage signals to the
higher brain centers. Some of
From brain To brain
Nociceptors
these descending pathways use
Dorsal horn naturally occurring, opiate-like
chemicals called endorphins.

Muscle fiber

17
Learning and memory

T
he conscious memory of a patient known as rate ways and then store it di∑erently. Procedural knowledge, the
H.M. is limited almost entirely to events that knowledge of how to do something, is expressed in skilled behav-
occurred years before his surgery, which ior and learned habits. Declarative knowledge provides an explicit,
removed part of the medial temporal lobe of his consciously accessible record of individual previous experiences
brain to relieve epilepsy. H.M. can remember and a sense of familiarity about those experiences. Declarative
recent events for only a few minutes. Talk with knowledge requires processing in the medial temporal region and
him awhile and then leave the room. When you return, he has parts of the thalamus, while procedural knowledge requires pro-
no recollection of ever having seen you before. cessing by the basal ganglia. Other kinds of memory depend on
The medial temporal lobe, which includes the hippocam- the amygdala (emotional aspects of memory) and the cerebellum
pus and adjacent brain areas, seems to play a role in converting (motor learning where precise timing is involved).
memory from a short-term to a long-term, permanent form. An important factor that influences what is stored and how
The fact that H.M. retains memories for events that are remote strongly it is stored is whether the action is followed by reward-
to his surgery is evidence that the medial temporal region is not ing or punishing consequences. This is an important principle
the site of permanent storage but that it plays a role in the for- in determining what behaviors an organism will learn and
mation of new memories. Other patients like H.M. have also remember. The amygdala appears to play an important role in
been described. these memory events.
Additional evidence comes from patients undergoing elec- How exactly does memory occur? After years of study, there
troconvulsive therapy (ECT) for depression. ECT is thought to is much support for the idea that memory involves a persistent
temporarily disrupt the function of the hippocampus and change in the relationship between neurons. In animal studies,
related structures. These patients typically su∑er di≈culty with scientists found that this occurs through biochemical events in
new learning and have amnesia for events that occurred during the short term that a∑ect the strength of the relevant synapses.
the several years before treatment. Memory of earlier events is The stability of long-term memory is conferred by structural
unimpaired. As time passes after treatment, much of the lost modifications within neurons that change the strength and
part of memory becomes available once again. number of synapses. For example, researchers can correlate
The hippocampus and the medial temporal region are con- specific chemical and structural changes in the relevant cells
nected with widespread areas of the cerebral cortex, especially with several simple forms of behavioral change exhibited by the
the vast regions responsible for thinking and language. Whereas sea slug Aplysia.
the medial temporal region is important for forming and orga- Another important model for the study of memory is the
nizing memory, cortical areas are important for the long-term phenomenon of long-term potentiation (LTP), a long-lasting
storage of knowledge about facts and events and for how these increase in the strength of a synaptic response following stim-
are used in everyday situations. ulation. LTP occurs prominently in the hippocampus, as well
Working memory, a type of transient memory that enables as in other brain areas. Studies of rats suggest LTP occurs by
us to retain what someone has said just long enough to reply, changes in synaptic strength at contacts involving NMDA
depends in part on the prefrontal cortex. Researchers discov- receptors. It is now possible to study LTP and learning in
ered that certain neurons in this area are influenced by neurons genetically modified mice that have abnormalities of specific
releasing dopamine and other neurons releasing glutamate. genes. Abnormal gene expression can be limited to particular
While much is unknown about learning and memory, scien- brain areas and time periods, such as during learning.
tists can recognize certain pieces of the process. For example, the Scientists believe that no single brain center stores mem-
brain appears to process di∑erent kinds of information in sepa- ory. It most likely is stored in the same, distributed collection

18
LEARNING AND MEMORY,
BASAL GANGLIA SPEECH AND LANGUAGE.
Cerebral cortex
Structures believed to be impor-
tant for various kinds of learning
and memory include the cere-
Caudate
nucleus bral cortex, amygdala, hip-
Putamen pocampus, cerebellum and
Globus basal ganglia. Areas of the left
pallidus
hemisphere (inset) are known to
Amygdaloid be active in speech and lan-
nucleus
guage. The form and meaning of
an utterance is believed to arise
in Wernicke’s area and then
AREAS OF SPEECH
AND LANGUAGE Broca’s area, which is related to
vocalization. Wernicke’s area is
Broca’s area also important for language
Wernicke’s area
Amygdala Hippocampus comprehension.
Angular
gyrus
Cerebellum

of cortical processing systems involved in the perception, pro- word is then processed for comprehension in Wernicke’s area
cessing and analysis of the material being learned. In short, as if the word had been heard. Writing in response to an oral
each part of the brain most likely contributes di∑erently to per- instruction requires information to be passed along the same
manent memory storage. pathways in the opposite direction—from the auditory cortex
One of the most prominent intellectual activities depen- to Wernicke’s area to the angular gyrus. This model accounts
dent on memory is language. While the neural basis of lan- for much of the data from patients, and is the most widely used
guage is not fully understood, scientists have learned much model for clinical diagnosis and prognosis. However, some
about this feature of the brain from studies of patients who have refinements to this model may be necessary due to both recent
lost speech and language abilities due to stroke, and from behav- studies with patients and functional neuroimaging studies in
ioral and functional neuroimaging studies of normal people. normal people.
A prominent and influential model, based on studies of For example, using an imaging technique called positron
these patients, proposes that the underlying structure of speech emission tomography (PET), scientists have demonstrated that
comprehension arises in Wernicke’s area, a portion of the left some reading tasks performed by normal people activated nei-
hemisphere of the brain. This temporal lobe region is connected ther Wernicke’s area nor the angular gyrus. These results sug-
with Broca’s area in the frontal lobe where a program for vocal gest that there is a direct reading route that does not involve
expression is created. This program is then transmitted to a speech sound recoding of the visual stimulus before the pro-
nearby area of the motor cortex that activates the mouth, cessing of either meaning or speaking. Other studies with
tongue and larynx. patients also have indicated that it is likely that familiar words
This same model proposes that, when we read a word, the need not be recoded into sound before they can be understood.
information is transmitted from the primary visual cortex to the Although the understanding of how language is imple-
angular gyrus where the message is somehow matched with the mented in the brain is far from complete, there are now several
sounds of the words when spoken. The auditory form of the techniques that may be used to gain important insights.

19
Movement

F
rom the stands, we marvel at the perfectly placed The sensitivity of the muscle spindle organs is controlled
serves of professional tennis players and lightning- by the brain through a separate set of gamma motor neurons that
fast double plays executed by big league infielders. control the specialized spindle muscle fibers and allow the brain
But in fact, every one of us in our daily lives per- to fine-tune the system for di∑erent movement tasks. Other
forms highly skilled movements, such as walking muscle sense organs signal muscle force that a∑ects motor neu-
upright, speaking and writing, that are no less rons through separate sets of spinal neurons. We now know that
remarkable. A finely tuned and highly complex central nervous this complex system responds di∑erently for tasks that require
system controls the action of hundreds of muscles in accom- precise control of position (holding a full teacup), as opposed
plishing these everyday marvels. to those that require rapid, strong movement (throwing a ball).
In order to understand how the nervous system performs You can experience such changes in motor strategy when you
this trick, we have to start with muscles. Most muscles attach compare walking down an illuminated staircase with the same
to points on the skeleton that cross one or more joints. Acti- task done in the dark.
vation of a given muscle, the agonist, can open or close the Another useful reflex is the flexion withdrawal that occurs
joints that it spans or act to sti∑en them, depending on the if your bare foot encounters a sharp object. Your leg is imme-
forces acting on those joints from the environment or other diately lifted from the source of potential injury (flexion) but
muscles that oppose the agonist, the antagonists. Relatively few the opposite leg responds with increased extension in order to
muscles act on soft tissue. Examples include the muscles that maintain your balance. The latter event is called the crossed
move the eyes and tongue, and the muscles that control facial extension reflex. These responses occur very rapidly and without
expression. your attention because they are built into systems of neurons
A muscle is made up of thousands of individual muscle located within the spinal cord itself.
fibers, each of which is controlled by one alpha motor neuron in It seems likely that the same systems of spinal neurons also
either the brain or spinal cord. On the other hand, a single participate in controlling the alternating action of the legs dur-
alpha neuron can control hundreds of muscle fibers, forming a ing normal walking. In fact, the basic patterns of muscle acti-
motor unit. These motor neurons are the critical link between vation that produce coordinated walking can be generated in
the brain and muscles. When these neurons die, a person is no four-footed animals within the spinal cord itself. It seems likely
longer able to move. that these spinal mechanisms, which evolved in primitive ver-
The simplest movements are reflexes—fixed muscle tebrates, are probably still present in the human spinal cord.
responses to particular stimuli. Studies show sensory stretch The most complex movements that we perform, including
receptors—called muscle spindles, which include small, special- voluntary ones that require conscious planning, involve control
ized muscle fibers and are located in most muscles—send infor- of the spinal mechanisms by the brain. Scientists are only
mation about muscles directly to alpha motor neurons. beginning to understand the complex interactions that take
Sudden muscle stretch (such as when a doctor taps a mus- place between di∑erent brain regions during voluntary move-
cle tendon to test your reflexes) sends a barrage of impulses into ments, mostly through careful experiments on animals. One
the spinal cord along the muscle spindle sensory fibers. This, important area is the motor cortex, which exerts powerful con-
in turn, activates motor neurons in the stretched muscle, caus- trol of the spinal cord neurons and has direct control of some
ing a contraction which is called the stretch reflex. The same motor neurons in monkeys and humans. Some neurons in the
sensory stimulus causes inactivation, or inhibition, in the motor motor cortex appear to specify the coordinated action of many
neurons of the antagonist muscles through connecting neurons, muscles, so as to produce organized movement of the limb to
called inhibitory neurons, within the spinal cord. a particular place in space.

20
MOVEMENT. The stretch reflex
Sensory neuron (above) occurs when a doctor taps
a muscle tendon to test your
reflexes. This sends a barrage of
Alpha motor neuron impulses into the spinal cord
Extensor muscles activated along muscle spindle sensory
Muscle fibers and activates motor neu-
spindle
rons to the stretched muscle to
Inhibitory neuron cause contraction (stretch reflex).
Flexor muscles inhibited The same sensory stimulus
causes inactivation, or inhibition,
of the motor neurons to the antag-
Stimulus
onist muscles through connection
Response neurons, called inhibitory neu-
Efferent nerves
rons, within the spinal cord.
Afferent nerves
A≈erent nerves carry messages
from sense organs to the spinal
Inhibitory neurons cord; e≈erent nerves carry motor
commands from the spinal cord to
Excitatory neurons
Sensory neuron muscles. Flexion withdrawal
(below) can occur when your bare
foot encounters a sharp object.
Motor neurons
Extensor Your leg is immediately lifted
muscles
inhibited (flexion) from the source of poten-
-
Extensor muscles activated
Motor
tial injury, but the opposite leg
neurons responds with increased exten-
Flexor sion in order to maintain your bal-
muscles
activated ance. The latter event is called the

Flexor crossed extension reflex. These


muscles
responses occur very rapidly and
inhibited
without your attention because

Right leg extends to


they are built into systems of neu-
balance body
rons located within the spinal
cord itself.
Stimulus

In addition to the motor cortex, movement control also The cerebellum is critically involved in the control of all
involves the interaction of many other brain regions, including skilled movements. Loss of cerebellar function leads to poor
the basal ganglia and thalamus, the cerebellum and a large coordination of muscle control and disorders of balance. The
number of neuron groups located within the midbrain and cerebellum receives direct and powerful sensory information
brainstem—regions that connect cerebral hemispheres with the from the muscle receptors, and the sense organs of the inner
spinal cord. ear, which signal head position and movement, as well as sig-
Scientists know that the basal ganglia and thalamus have nals from the cerebral cortex. It apparently acts to integrate all
widespread connections with sensory and motor areas of the this information to ensure smooth coordination of muscle
cerebral cortex. Loss of regulation of the basal ganglia by action, enabling us to perform skilled movements more or less
dopamine depletion can cause serious movement disorders, automatically. There is evidence that, as we learn to walk, speak
such as Parkinson’s disease. Loss of dopamine neurons in the or play a musical instrument, the necessary detailed control
substantia nigra on the midbrain, which connects with the basal information is stored within the cerebellum where it can be
ganglia, is a major factor in Parkinson’s. called upon by commands from the cerebral cortex.

21
Sleep

S
leep remains one of the great mysteries of mod- the promise for devising new treatments to allow millions of
ern neuroscience. We spend nearly one-third people to get a good night’s sleep.
of our lives asleep, but the function of sleep still
is not known. Fortunately, over the last few The stu≈ of sleep
years researchers have made great headway in Sleep appears to be a passive and restful time when the brain is
understanding some of the brain circuitry that less active. In fact, this state actually involves a highly active
controls wake-sleep states. and well-scripted interplay of brain circuits to produce the
Scientists now recognize that sleep consists of several stages of sleeping.
di∑erent stages; that the choreography of a night’s sleep The stages of sleep were discovered in the 1950s in experi-
involves the interplay of these stages, a process that depends ments examining the human brain waves or electroencephalo-
upon a complex switching mechanism; and that the sleep stages gram (EEG) during sleep. Researchers also measured move-
are accompanied by daily rhythms in bodily hormones, body ments of the eyes and the limbs during sleep. They found that
temperature and other functions. over the course of the first hour or so of sleep each night, the
Sleep disorders are among the nation’s most common brain progresses through a series of stages during which the
health problems, a∑ecting up to 70 million people, most of brain waves progressively slow down. The period of slow wave
whom are undiagnosed and untreated. These disorders are one sleep is accompanied by relaxation of the muscles and the eyes.
of the least recognized sources of disease, disability and even Heart rate, blood pressure and body temperature all fall. If
death, costing an estimated $100 billion annually in lost pro- awakened at this time, most people recall only a feeling or
ductivity, medical bills and industrial accidents. Research holds image, not an active dream.

SLEEP PATTERNS. During a night of sleep, the brain waves of a young adult recorded by the electroencephalogram (EEG) gradually slow down and
become larger as the individual passes into deeper stages of slow wave sleep. After about an hour, the brain re-emerges through the same series of
stages, and there is usually a brief period of REM sleep (on dark areas of graph), during which the EEG is similar to wakefulness. The body is com-
pletely relaxed, the person is deeply unresponsive and usually is dreaming. The cycle repeats over the course of the night, with more REM sleep,
and less time spent in the deeper stages of slow wave sleep as the night progresses.

Awake
Awake

Stage 1
Stage 1

Stage 2
Stage 2

Stage 3
Stage 3

Stage 4

Stage 4
1 2 3 4 6 7 Hours

22
THE WAKING AND SLEEPING
BRAIN. Wakefulness is main-
Cerebral
cortex tained by activity in two systems
of brainstem neurons. Nerve
cells that make the neurotrans-
mitter acetylcholine stimulate
the thalamus, which activates
the cerebral cortex (red path-
way). Full wakefulness also
requires cortical activation by
other neurons that make
monoamine neurotransmitters
such as norepinephrine, sero-
tonin and histamine (blue path-
way). During slow wave sleep,
when the brain becomes less
active, neuron activity in both
pathways slows down. During
Thalamus
rapid eye movement sleep, in
which dreaming occurs, the neu-
rons using acetylcholine fire
Pons rapidly, producing a dreaming
state, but the monoamine cells
stop firing altogether.

Spinal cord

Over the next half hour or so, the brain emerges from the Sleep disorders
deep slow wave sleep as the EEG waves become progressively The most common sleep disorder, and the one most people are
faster. Similar to during waking, rapid eye movements emerge, familiar with, is insomnia. Some people have di≈culty falling
but the body’s muscles become almost completely paralyzed asleep initially, but other people fall asleep, and then awaken
(only the muscles that allow breathing remain active). This state part way through the night, and cannot fall asleep again.
is often called rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. During REM Although there are a variety of short-acting sedatives and
sleep, there is active dreaming. Heart rate, blood pressure and sedating antidepressant drugs available to help, none of these
body temperature become much more variable. Men often have produces a truly natural and restful sleep state because they tend
erections during this stage of sleep. The first REM period usu- to suppress the deeper stages of slow wave sleep.
ally lasts ten to 15 minutes. Excessive daytime sleepiness may have many causes. The
Over the course of the night, these alternative cycles of slow most common are disorders that disrupt sleep and result in
wave and REM sleep alternate, with the slow wave sleep inadequate amounts of sleep, particularly the deeper stages.
becoming less deep, and the REM periods more prolonged, These are usually diagnosed in the sleep laboratory. Here, the
until waking occurs. EEG, eye movements and muscle tone are monitored electri-
Over the course of a lifetime, the pattern of sleep cycles cally as the individual sleeps. In addition, the heart, breathing,
changes. Infants sleep up to 18 hours per day, and they spend and oxygen content of the blood can be monitored.
much more time in deep slow wave sleep. As children mature, Obstructive sleep apnea causes the airway muscles in the
they spend less time asleep, and less time in deep slow wave throat to collapse as sleep deepens. This prevents breathing,
sleep. Older adults may sleep only six to seven hours per night, which causes arousal, and prevents the su∑erer from entering
often complain of early wakening that they cannot avoid, and the deeper stages of slow wave sleep. This condition can also
spend very little time in slow wave sleep. cause high blood pressure and may increase the risk of heart

23
attack. There is also an increased risk of daytime accident, espe- that contain the neurotransmitter norepinephrine; in the dor-
cially automobile accidents, which may prevent driving. Treat- sal and median raphe groups that contain serotonin; and in the
ment is complex and may include a variety of attempts to reduce tuberomammillary cell group that contains histamine. These
airway collapse during sleep. While simple things like losing monoamine neurons fire most rapidly during wakefulness, but
weight, avoiding alcohol and sedating drugs prior to sleep, and they slow down during slow wave sleep, and they stop during
avoiding sleeping on one’s back can sometimes help, most peo- REM sleep.
ple with sleep apnea require positive airway pressure to keep the The brainstem cell groups that control arousal are in turn
airway open. This can be provided by fitting a small mask over regulated by two groups of nerve cells in the hypothalamus, part
the nose that provides an air stream under pressure during sleep. of the brain that controls basic body cycles. One group of nerve
In some cases, surgery is needed to correct the airway anatomy. cells, in the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus, contain inhibitory
Periodic limb movements of sleep are intermittent jerks of the neurotransmitters, galanin and GABA. When the ventrolateral
legs or arms, which occur as the individual enters slow wave preoptic neurons fire, they are thought to turn o∑ the arousal
sleep, and can cause arousal from sleep. Other people have systems, causing sleep. Damage to the ventrolateral preoptic
episodes in which their muscles fail to be paralyzed during nucleus produces irreversible insomnia.
REM sleep, and they act out their dreams. This REM behavior A second group of nerve cells in the lateral hypothalamus
disorder can also be very disruptive to a normal nights’ sleep. act as an activating switch. They contain the neurotransmitters
Both disorders are more common in people with Parkinson’s orexin and dynorphin, which provide an excitatory signal to the
disease, and both can be treated with drugs that treat Parkin- arousal system, particularly to the monoamine neurons. In
son’s, or with an anti-epileptic drug called clonazepam. experiments in which the gene for the neurotransmitter orexin
Narcolepsy is a relatively uncommon condition (one case per was experimentally removed in mice, the animals became nar-
2,500 people) in which the switching mechanism for REM coleptic. Similarly, in two dog strains with naturally occurring
sleep does not work properly. Narcoleptics have sleep attacks narcolepsy, an abnormality was discovered in the gene for the
during the day, in which they suddenly fall asleep. This is type 2 orexin receptor. Recent studies show that in humans with
socially disruptive, as well as dangerous, for example, if they are narcolepsy, the orexin levels in the brain and spinal fluid are
driving. They tend to enter REM sleep very quickly as well, and abnormally low. Thus, orexin appears to play a critical role in
may even enter a dreaming state while still awake, a condition activating the monoamine system, and preventing abnormal
known as hypnagogic hallucinations. They also have attacks dur- transitions, particularly into REM sleep.
ing which they lose muscle tone, similar to what occurs during Two main signals control this circuitry. First, there is home-
REM sleep, but while they are awake. Often, this occurs while ostasis, or the body’s need to seek a natural equilibrium. There
they are falling asleep or just waking up, but attacks of paraly- is an intrinsic need for a certain amount of sleep each day. The
sis known as cataplexy can be triggered by an emotional expe- mechanism for accumulating sleep need is not yet clear. Some
rience or even hearing a funny joke. people think that a chemical called adenosine may accumulate
Recently, insights into the mechanism of narcolepsy have in the brain during prolonged wakefulness, and that it may
given major insights into the processes that control these mys- drive sleep homeostasis. Interestingly, the drug ca∑eine, which
terious transitions between waking, slow wave and REM sleep is widely used to prevent sleepiness, acts as an adenosine
states. blocker, to prevent its e∑ects.
If an individual does not get enough sleep, the sleep debt
How is sleep regulated? progressively accumulates, and leads to a degradation of men-
During wakefulness, the brain is kept in an alert state by the tal function. When the opportunity comes to sleep again, the
interactions of two major systems of nerve cells. Nerve cells in individual will sleep much more, to “repay” the debt, and the
the upper part of the pons and in the midbrain, which make slow wave sleep debt is usually “paid o∑” first.
acetylcholine as their neurotransmitter, send inputs to the thal- The other major influence on sleep cycles is the body’s cir-
amus, to activate it. When the thalamus is activated, it in turn cadian clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus. This small group of
activates the cerebral cortex, and produces a waking EEG pat- nerve cells in the hypothalamus contains clock genes, which go
tern. However, that is not all there is to wakefulness. As dur- through a biochemical cycle of almost exactly 24 hours, setting
ing REM sleep, the cholinergic nerve cells and the thalamus the pace for daily cycles of activity, sleep, hormones and other
and cortex are in a condition similar to wakefulness, but the bodily functions. The suprachiasmatic nucleus also receives an
brain is in REM sleep, and is not very responsive to external input directly from the retina, and the clock can be reset by
stimuli. light, so that it remains linked to the outside world’s day-night
The di∑erence is supplied by three sets of nerve cells in the cycle. The suprachiasmatic nucleus provides a signal to the ven-
upper part of the brainstem: nerve cells in the locus coeruleus trolateral preoptic nucleus and probably the orexin neurons.

24
Stress

he urge to act in the presence of stress has been your perception of events, you can do much to avoid the harm-

T
with us since our ancient ancestors. In response ful consequences of stress.
to impending danger, muscles are primed,
attention is focused and nerves are readied for The immediate response
action—fight or flight. But in today’s corpora- A stressful situation activates three major communication sys-
tion-dominated world, this response to stress is tems in the brain that regulate bodily functions. Scientists have
simply inappropriate and may be a contributor to heart disease, come to understand these complex systems through experi-
accidents and aging. ments primarily with rats, mice and nonhuman primates, such
Indeed, nearly two-thirds of ailments seen in doctors’ as monkeys. Scientists then verified the action of these systems
o≈ces are commonly thought to be stress-induced or related to in humans.
stress in some way. Surveys indicate that 60 percent of Amer- The first of these systems is the voluntary nervous system,
icans feel they are under a great deal of stress at least once a which sends messages to muscles so that we may respond to
week. Costs due to stress from absenteeism, medical expenses sensory information. For example, the sight of a growling bear
and lost productivity are estimated at $300 billion annually. on a trail in Yellowstone National Park prompts you to run as
Only recently admitted into the medical vocabulary, stress quickly as possible.
is di≈cult to define because its e∑ects vary with each individ- The second communication system is the autonomic nervous
ual. Dr. Hans Selye, a founder of stress research, called it “the system. It combines the sympathetic or emergency branch,
rate of wear and tear in the body.” Other specialists now define which gets us going in emergencies, and the parasympathetic or
stress as any external stimulus that threatens homeostasis—the calming branch, which keeps the body’s maintenance systems,
normal equilibrium of body function. Among the most power- such as digestion, in order and calms the body’s responses to
ful stressors are psychological and psychosocial stressors that the emergency branch.
exist between members of the same species. Lack or loss of con- Each of these systems has a specific task. The emergency
trol is a particularly important feature of severe psychological branch causes arteries supplying blood to the muscles to relax
stress that can have physiological consequences. in order to deliver more blood, allowing greater capacity to act.
During the last six decades, researchers using animals found At the same time, the emergency system reduces blood flow to
that stress both helps and harms the body. When confronted the skin, kidney and digestive tract and increases blood flow to
with a crucial challenge, properly controlled stress responses the muscles. In contrast, the calming branch helps to regulate
can provide the extra strength and energy needed to cope. bodily functions and soothe the body, preventing it from
Moreover, the acute physiological response to stress protects remaining too long in a state of mobilization. Remaining mobi-
the body and brain and helps to re-establish or maintain home- lized and left unchecked, these body functions could lead to
ostasis. But stress that continues for prolonged periods of time disease. Some actions of the calming branch appear to reduce
can repeatedly elevate the physiological stress responses or fail the harmful e∑ects of the emergency branch’s response to stress.
to shut them o∑ when not needed. When this occurs, these The brain’s third major communication process is the neu-
same physiological mechanisims can badly upset the body’s bio- roendocrine system, which also maintains the body’s internal
chemical balance and accelerate disease. functioning. Various “stress hormones” travel through the blood
Scientists also believe that the individual variation in and stimulate the release of other hormones, which a∑ect bod-
responding to stress is somewhat dependent on a person’s per- ily processes, such as metabolic rate and sexual functions.
ception of external events. This perception ultimately shapes Major stress hormones are epinephrine (also known as
his or her internal physiological response. Thus, by controlling adrenaline) and cortisol. When the body is exposed to stressors,

25
STRESS
THE STRESS REACTION. When
stress occurs, the sympathetic
AUTONOMIC nervous system is triggered.
NERVOUS SYSTEM
Norepinephrine is released by
nerves, and epinephrine is
secreted by the adrenal glands.
Eyes
By activating receptors in blood
vessels and other structures,
these substances ready the
Thymus and
Immune System heart and working muscles for
action.
Muscle In the parasympathetic ner-
vous system, acetylcholine is
released, producing calming
Blood Heart
vessels e≈ects. The digestive tract is
stimulated to digest a meal, the
heart rate slows and the pupils
Stomach
of the eye become smaller.
The neuroendocrine system
Adrenal gland
also maintains the body’s
normal internal function-
Intestines
ing. Corticotrophin-releas-
ing factor (CRF), a peptide
formed by chains of amino acids,
is released from the hypothala-
mus, a collection of cells at the
base of the brain that acts as a
control center for the neuroen-
NEUROENDOCRINE SYSTEM docrine system. CRF travels to
the pituitary gland where it trig-
Blood
stream
gers the release of adrenocorti-
STRESS
Prepares body cotropic hormone (ACTH). ACTH
Epinephrine for immediate
response travels in the blood to the
CRF adrenal glands where it stimu-
lates the release of cortisol.
Cortisol Re-establishes
ACTH homeostatis

Hypothalamus Pituitary

epinephrine is quickly released into the bloodstream to put the and helps the body recover from energy mobilization.
body into a general state of arousal and enable it to cope with Acute stress also increases activity of the immune system
a challenge. and helps protect the body from disease pathogens. The two
The secretion by the adrenal glands of cortisol—known as major stress hormones, cortisol and adrenaline, facilitate the
a glucocorticoid because it a∑ects the metabolism of glucose, a movement of immune cells from the bloodstream and storage
source of energy—starts about five minutes later. Some of its organs such as the spleen into tissue where they are needed to
actions help to mediate the stress-response, while some of its defend against an infection.
other, slower ones, counteract the primary response to stress Glucocorticoids also a∑ect food intake during the sleep-
and help re-establish homeostasis. Over the short run, cortisol wake cycle. Cortisol levels peak in the body in the early morn-
mobilizes energy and delivers it to muscles for the body’s ing hours just before waking. This hormone acts as a wake-up
response. With prolonged exposure, cortisol enhances feeding signal and helps to turn on appetite and physical activity. This

26
e∑ect of glucocorticoids may help to explain disorders, such as induced immunosuppression can also be beneficial. It reduces
jet-lag, which result when the light-dark cycle is altered by jet inflammation and counteracts allergic reactions and autoim-
travel over long distances, causing the body’s biological clock mune responses that occur when the body’s defenses turn against
to reset itself more slowly. Until that clock is reset, cortisol body tissue. Synthetic glucocorticoids like hydrocortisone and
secretion and hunger, as well as sleepiness and wakefulness, prednisone are used all the time to decrease inflammation and
occur at inappropriate times of day in the new location. autoimmunity. But glucocorticoids may be harmful in the case
Glucocorticoids do more than help the body respond to of increased tumor growth associated with stress in experiments
stress. In fact, they are an integral part of daily life and the on animals—an area of intense research yet to yield any final
adaptation to environmental change. The adrenal glands help conclusions.
protect us from stress and are essential for survival. One important determinant of the immune system’s resis-
tance or susceptibility to disease may be a person’s sense of
Chronic stress control as opposed to a feeling of helplessness. This phenom-
When glucocorticoids or epinephrine are secreted in response enon may help explain large individual variations in response
to the prolonged psychological stress commonly encountered to disease. Scientists are trying to identify how the percep-
by humans, the results are not tion of control or helpless-
ideal. Normally, bodily sys- Stressful experiences have a direct e≈ect on ness influences physiologi-
tems gear up under stress, and cal processes that regulate
hormones are released to heart rate and blood pressure. When stressors immune function.
enhance muscular activity and The cardiovascular system
restore homeostasis. If you are are chronic and psychological, the e≈ect can be receives many messages from
not fighting or fleeing—but the autonomic nervous sys-
standing frustrated in a super- extremely harmful and result in an increased tem, and stressful experiences
market check-out line or sit- have an immediate and direct
ting in a tra≈c jam—you are risk for heart attack. e∑ect on heart rate and blood
not engaging in muscular exer- pressure. In the short run,
cise. Yet these systems continue to be stimulated. these changes help in response to stressors. But when stressors
Overexposure to cortisol also can lead to weakened mus- are chronic and psychological, the e∑ect can be harmful and
cles and the suppression of major bodily systems. Elevated epi- result in accelerated atherosclerosis and increased risk for heart
nephrine production increases blood pressure. Together, ele- attack. Research supports the idea that people holding jobs that
vated cortisol and epinephrine can contribute to chronic carry high demands and low control, such as telephone opera-
hypertension (high blood pressure), abdominal obesity and ath- tors, waiters and cashiers, have higher rates of heart disease
erosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). than people who can dictate the pace and style of their work-
Scientists have identified a variety of stress-related disor- ing lives.
ders, including colitis, high blood pressure, clogged arteries, Behavioral type a∑ects a person’s susceptibility to heart
impotency and loss of sex drive in males, irregular menstrual attack. People at greatest risk are hostile, irritated by trivial
cycles in females, adult-onset diabetes and possibly cancer. things and exhibit signs of struggle against time and other
Aging rats show impairment of neuronal function in the hip- challenges.
pocampus—an area of the brain important for learning, mem- Researchers found that two groups of men—one with high
ory and emotion—as a result of cortisol secretion throughout hostility scores and the other with low hostility scores—exhibited
their lifetimes. Overexposure to glucocorticoids also increases the similar increases in blood pressure and blood muscle flow when
number of neurons damaged by stroke. Moreover, prolonged performing a lab test. This confirmed that hostility scores do
exposure before or immediately after birth can cause a decrease not predict the biological response to simple mental tasks.
in the normal number of brain neurons and smaller brain size. Then the researchers added harassment to the test by lead-
The immune system, which receives messages from the ner- ing the subjects to believe that their performances were being
vous system, also is sensitive to many of the circulating hor- unfairly criticized. Men with high hostility scores showed much
mones of the body, including stress hormones. Moderate to larger increases in muscle blood flow and blood pressure, and
high levels of glucocorticoids act to suppress immune function, slower recovery than those with low hostility scores. Scientists
although acute elevations of stress hormones actually facilitate found that harassed men with high hostility scores have larger
immune function. increases in levels of stress hormones. Thus, if you are a hostile
Although acute stress-induced immunoenhancement can person, learning to reduce or avoid anger could be important to
be protective against disease pathogens, the glucocorticoid- avoid cardiovascular damage.

27
Aging

P
ablo Picasso, Georgia O’Keefe and Grandma people, or four percent of the population, were older than age
Moses, artists. Louise Nevelson, sculptor. Albert 65, and typically they were ill. In 1990, when life expectancy was
Einstein, physicist. Giuseppe Verdi, musician. more than 75 years, 30 million people, or 12 percent of the pop-
Robert Frost, poet. Each of these great minds ulation, were older than age 65. A generation ago, frailty was
worked di∑erently, but they all shared an out- seen among people in their 60s; today it is more typical among
standing trait: They were creative and produc- those in their 80s. Moreover, few people challenged the notion
tive in old age. They defied the popular notion that aging always that aging meant inevitable brain decline because scientists
leads to a pronounced decline and loss of cognitive ability. knew little about the brain or the aging process. Today’s under-
Neuroscientists now believe that the brain can remain rel- standing of how the normal brain ages comes from studies of
atively healthy and fully functioning as it ages, and that diseases the nervous system that began decades ago and are just now
are the causes of the most severe decline in memory, intelligence, bearing results. Modern technologies now make it possible to
verbal fluency and other tasks. Researchers are investigating the explore the structure and functions of the brain in more depth
normal changes that occur over time and the e∑ect that these than ever before and to ask questions about what actually hap-
changes have on reasoning and other intellectual activities. pens in its aging cells.
It appears that the e∑ects of age on brain function vary Thus, neuroscientists are increasingly able to distinguish
widely. The vast majority of people get only a bit forgetful in between the processes of normal aging and disease. While some
old age, particularly in forming memories of recent events. For changes do occur in normal aging, they are not as severe as sci-
example, once you reach your 70s, you may start to forget names entists once thought.
or phone numbers, or respond more slowly to conflicting infor- All human behavior is determined by how well the brain’s
mation. This is not disease. However, other individuals develop communication systems work. Often a failure in the cascade of
senile dementia, the progressive and severe impairment in men- one of these systems results in a disturbance of normal func-
tal function that interferes with daily living. The senile demen- tions. Such a failure may be caused by an abnormal biochemi-
tias include Alzheimer’s and cerebrovascular diseases and a∑ect cal process or by a loss of neurons.
about one percent of people younger than age 65, with the inci- The cause of brain aging still remains a mystery. Dozens of
dence increasing to nearly 50 percent in those older than 85. In theories abound. One says that specific “aging genes” are
a small, third group, that includes the Picassos, Nevelsons and switched on at a certain time of life. Another points to genetic
others, mental functioning seems una∑ected by age. Many peo- mutations or deletions. Other theories implicate hormonal
ple do well throughout life and continue to do well even when influences, an immune system gone awry and the accumulation
they are old. The oldest human, Jeanne Calment, was consid- of damage caused by cell byproducts that destroy fats and pro-
ered to have all her wits during her 122-year lifespan. teins vital to normal cell function.
It’s important to understand that scientific studies measure
trends and reflect what happens to the norm. They don’t tell what Aging neurons
happens to everybody. Some people in their 70s and 80s func- The brain reaches its maximum weight near age 20 and slowly
tion as well as those in their 30s and 40s. The wisdom and expe- loses about 10 percent of its weight over a lifetime. Subtle
rience of older people often make up for deficits in performance. changes in the chemistry and structure of the brain begin at
The belief that pronounced and progressive mental decline midlife in most people. During a lifetime, the brain is at risk
is inevitable was and still is popular for several reasons. For one, for losing some of its neurons, but neuron loss is not a normal
until the 20th century, few people lived to healthy old ages. In process of aging. Brain tissue can respond to damage or loss of
1900, when life expectancy was about 47 years, three million neurons in Alzheimer’s disease or after stroke by expanding

28
Frontal cortex
Parietal cortex
Basal forebrain

tists debate whether this circuitry is changed only by neuron


Striate cortex
atrophy or whether some neuron loss over time also is in-
evitable. In any event, when the circuitry begins to break down,
remaining neurons can respond by expanding their roles.
THE AGING BRAIN. Studies of people who have died contradict the Learning conditions may dictate what happens to brain
popular belief that adults lose an enormous number of neurons every cells. Studies of rats shed light on some of the changes that
day. In fact, many areas of the brain, primarily in the cortex, maintain occur in brain cells when the animals live in challenging and
most of their neurons. Examples include the parietal cortex, which stimulating environments. In tests of middle-aged rats exposed
plays a role in sensory processes and language, and the striate cortex, to these environments, researchers found that dendrites in the
which processes visual information. However, neurons in regions far cerebral cortex, which is responsible for all conscious activity,
below the cortex—such as the nucleus basalis, the principal compo- developed more and longer branches when compared with rats
nent of the basal forebrain—decrease in number with age, and cell housed in isolated conditions. Another study showed that brain
processes, such as axons and synapses, also change. The nucleus cells in rats given acrobatic training had greater numbers of
basalis sends connections to the cortex that produce acetylcholine, synapses per cell than rats given only physical exercise or rats
a chemical important for memory. Thus, these abnormalities may con- who were inactive. The scientists concluded that motor learn-
tribute to the mental declines that occur in some elderly individuals. ing generates new synapses. Physical exercise, however, improved
blood circulation in the brain.
dendrites and refining connections between neurons. A dam- Other scientists report that rats reared in a stimulating envi-
aged brain neuron can readjust to damage only if its cell body ronment made significantly fewer errors on a maze test than
remains intact. If it does, regrowth can occur in dendrites and did similar rats kept in an isolated environment. Moreover, the
axons. When neurons are completely destroyed, nearby surviv- stimulated rats showed an increase in brain weight and corti-
ing neurons can compensate, in part, by growing new dendrites cal thickness when compared with the control animals.
and connections. Older rats tend to form new dendrites and synapses as do
younger animals in response to enriched environments. But the
Intellectual capacity response is more sluggish and not as large. Compared to younger
In the first large studies to follow the same group of normal rats, the older rats have less growth of the new blood vessels
healthy humans for many years, scientists have uncovered unex- that nourish neurons.
pected results. They report declines in some mental functions While much has been learned about the aging brain, many
and improvements in others. In one study, the speed of carry- questions remain to be answered. For instance, does the pro-
ing out certain tasks became slower, but vocabulary improved. duction of proteins decline with age in all brain neurons? In a
Several studies found less severe declines in the type of intelli- given neuron, does atrophy cause a higher likelihood of death?
gence relying on learned or stored information, compared with How does aging a∑ect gene expression in the brain—the organ
the type that uses the ability to deal with new information. with the greatest number of active genes? Are there gender
This research is supported by animal studies in which sci- di∑erences in brain aging that may be due to hormonal changes
entists found that changes in mental function are subtle. For at menopause?
example, in rodents and primates in which only minor brain Neuroscientists speculate that certain genes may be linked to
abnormalities can be detected, certain spatial tasks, such as nav- events leading to death in the nervous system. By understanding
igating to find food, tend to become more di≈cult with age. the biology of the proteins produced by genes, scientists hope to
The aging brain is only as resilient as its circuitry. Scien- be able to influence the survival and degeneration of neurons.

29
Advances

P
arkinson’s disease. This neurologic disorder af- troubled by the development of drug-related involuntary move-
flicts one million individuals in the U.S., the ments. The past decade has also seen further attempts to treat
majority of whom are older than 50. Parkinson’s such patients with surgical implantation of cells, such as fetal
is characterized by symptoms of slowness of cells, capable of producing dopamine. Replacement therapy
movement, muscular rigidity and tremor. with stem cells also is being explored.
The discoveries in the late 1950s that the level of
dopamine was decreased in the brains of patients was followed Pain
in the 1960s by the successful treatment of this disorder by If there is a universal experience, pain is it. Each year, more than
administration of the drug levodopa. This drug is changed to 97 million Americans su∑er chronic, debilitating headaches or
dopamine in the brain. The successful treatment of Parkinson’s a bout with a bad back or the pain of arthritis—all at a total
by replacement therapy is one of the greatest success stories in cost of some $100 billion. But it need not be that way. New dis-
all of neurology. Levodopa is now combined with another drug, coveries about how chemicals in the body transmit and inter-
carbidopa, that reduces the peripheral breakdown of levodopa, cept pain have paved the way for new treatments for both
thus allowing greater levels to reach the brain and reducing side chronic and acute pain.
e∑ects. Also playing an important role are newer drugs such as Until the middle of the 19th century, pain relief during
pergolide that act directly upon dopamine receptors and other surgery relied on natural substances, such as opium, alcohol and
inhibitors of dopamine breakdown. cannabis. All were inadequate and short-lived. Not until 1846
Genetic studies have demonstrated several inheritable gene did doctors discover the anesthetic properties of ether, first in
abnormalities in certain families, but the vast majority of cases animals and then in humans. Soon afterwards, the usefulness
of Parkinson’s occur sporadically. It is believed that heredity fac- of chloroform and nitrous oxide became known and heralded a
tors may render some individuals more vulnerable to environ- new era in surgery. The dozens of drugs used today during
mental factors such as pesticides. The discovery in the late 1970s surgery abolish pain, relax muscles and induce unconsciousness.
that a chemical substance, MPTP, can cause parkinsonism in Other agents reverse these e∑ects.
drug addicts stimulated intensive research on the causes of the Local anesthesia is used in a limited area of a person’s body
disorder. MPTP was accidently synthesized by illicit drug to prevent pain during examinations, diagnostic procedures,
designers seeking to produce a heroin-like compound. MPTP treatments and surgical operations. The most famous of these
was found to be converted in the brain to a substance that agents, which temporarily interrupt the action of pain-carrying
destroys dopamine neurons. Parkinson’s is now being inten- nerve fibers, is Novocain. Until recently, Novocain was used as
sively studied in a primate MPTP model. a local anesthetic by dentists; lidocaine is more popular today.
In the past several decades, scientists have shown in a pri- Analgesia produces loss of pain sensation without loss of sen-
mate model of Parkinson’s that specific regions in the basal gan- sitivity to touch. The two main types of analgesics are nonopioids
glia, the collections of cell bodies deep in the brain, are abnor- (aspirin and related non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such
mally overactive. Most importantly, they found that surgical as ibuprofen, naproxen and acetaminophen) and opioids (mor-
destruction of these overactive nuclei—the pallidum and sub- phine, codeine). Nonopioid analgesics are useful for treating
thalamic nucleus—can greatly reduce symptoms. The past mild or moderate pain, such as headache or toothache. Mod-
decade has witnessed a resurgence in this surgical procedure, erate pain also can be treated by combining a mild opioid, such
pallidotomy, and more recently chronic deep brain stimulation. as codeine with aspirin. Opioids are the most potent pain-
These techniques are highly successful for treating patients who killers and are used for severe pain, such as that occurring after
have experienced significant worsening of symptoms and are major chest or abdominal surgery.

30
HOW PAIN KILLERS WORK.
At the site of injury, the body
produces prostaglandins that
P A I increase pain sensitivity.

N
Aspirin, which acts primarily in
the periphery, prevents the pro-
duction of prostaglandins.
Acetaminophen is believed to
Aspirin acts here Cerebral cortex
block pain impulses in the brain
itself. Local anesthetics inter-
Thalamus
cept pain signals traveling up
Opiate drugs the nerve. Opiate drugs, which
act here
act primarily in the central ner-
vous system, block the transfer
of pain signals from the spinal
cord to the brain.

Local anesthetics
act here

Spinal cord

Insights into the body’s own pain-control system mediated Many di∑erent forms of epilepsy have been recognized.
by naturally occurring opioids led to the use of injections of Epilepsy, which can start at any age, can result from inheriting
morphine and endorphins, and other opioids, into the cere- a mutant gene. It also can result from a wide variety of diseases
brospinal fluid in which the spinal cord is bathed without caus- or injuries (including head injury), birth trauma, brain infec-
ing paralysis, numbness or other severe side e∑ects. This tech- tion (such as meningitis), brain tumors, stroke, drug intoxica-
nique came about through experiments with animals that first tion, drug or alcohol withdrawal states and metabolic disorders.
showed that injecting opioids into the spinal cord could pro- More than a dozen mutant genes that cause human epilepsy
duce profound pain control. This technique is now commonly have been identified during the past decade. In 70 percent of
used in humans to treat pain after surgery. cases, however, the cause is unknown.
New knowledge about other receptors and chemical medi- Seizures are of two types. Generalized seizures, which result
ators involved in the transmission of pain are leading to the in loss of consciousness, can cause several behavioral changes
development of new approaches to managing pain. These including convulsions or sudden changes in muscle tone and
include drugs that intercept pain messages at receptors that arise when there is excessive electrical activity over a wide area
bind glutamate, the major excitatory neurotransmitter in pain of the brain. Partial seizures may occur in full consciousness or
pathways. Other studies are using molecular biology techniques with altered awareness, and can cause behavioral changes. They
to identify specialized receptors and ion channels in nerve end- can range from visual, auditory and sensory disturbances to
ings that signal tissue damage of the skin, muscle or viscera. uncontrolled movements, and arise from excessive electrical
These studies have the promise of leading to new classes of activity in a limited area of the brain.
analgesic agents in the future. The drug phenytoin was a major advance in the treatment
of epilepsy because it illustrated that antiseizure medications
Epilepsy need not cause sedation (as does phenobarbital, an older drug
A chronic neurological disorder characterized by sudden, dis- for epilepsy) and encouraged the search for other drugs. Today
orderly discharge of brain cells, epilepsy is marked by recurrent more than a dozen medications, approximately half of which
seizures that temporarily alter one or more brain functions. The were introduced in the last several years, are used to prevent
disorder a∑ects approximately one percent of the population. seizures. The principal targets of antiseizure drugs are voltage-

31
gated ion channels permeable to sodium or calcium and synapses patients’ electroencephalograms (EEGs) often exhibit abnor-
using the transmitter GABA, a naturally occurring substance malities in their sleep patterns.
in the brain that acts to inhibit electrical discharge. Identi- The modern era of drug treatment for depression began in
fication of the mutant genes underlying human epilepsy is pro- the late 1950s. Most antidepressants a∑ect norepinephrine and
viding new targets for the next generation of antiseizure drugs. serotonin in the brain, apparently by correcting the abnormal
In many instances, epilepsy can be controlled with a single excess or inhibition of the signals that control mood, thoughts,
antiseizure drug that lessens the frequency of seizures. Some- pain and other sensations. The tricyclic antidepressants pri-
times a combination of drugs is necessary. Complete control of marily block the reabsorption and inactivation of serotonin and
seizures can be achieved in more than 50 percent of patients, and norepinephrine to varying degrees.
another 25 percent can be improved significantly. It is hoped Another class of antidepressant medications is the mono-
that the newly available antiseizure drugs will provide complete amine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs). MAOIs are thought to be
control in additional patients. more complicated than tricyclics. These agents inhibit mon-
Surgery, considered for the patients who do not respond to amine oxidase, an enzyme that breaks down serotonin, norepi-
drugs, should be performed only at specialized medical centers nephrine and dopamine, allowing these chemicals to remain
qualified to handle epilepsy surgery. One type of surgery requires active. During the 1950s, the first of the MAOIs, iproniazid,
precise location and removal of the area of the brain where the was found to make experimental animals hyperalert and hyper-
seizures originate. About 90 percent of properly selected patients active. By 1957, scientists had proven iproniazid’s benefit in
experience striking improvement or complete remission of patients. Later, other MAOIs were developed. Today, three are
seizures. Another type of surgery separates the left and right available for use: isocarboxazid, phenelzine and tranylcypromine.
hemispheres of the brain to control a type of seizure that origi- The popular medication fluoxetine (Prozac) is the first of a
nates in one hemisphere and spreads to involve the whole brain. new class of drugs, serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Fluoxetine
A new form of epilepsy treatment, electrical stimulation blocks the reabsorption and inactivation of serotonin and keeps
therapy, was introduced during the mid-1990s as another option it active in certain brain circuits. This seems to restore overall
for hard-to-control seizures. The implantable pacemaker-like serotonin activity to a more normal state and ease depression.
device delivers small bursts of electrical energy to the brain via
the vagus nerve on the side of the neck. Manic-depressive illness
Patients with manic-depressive illness, also known as bipolar
Major depression disorder, usually experience episodes of deep depression and
This aΩiction, with its harrowing feelings of sadness, hope- manic highs, with a return to relatively normal functioning in
lessness, pessimism, loss of interest in life and reduced emo- between. They also have an increased risk of suicide. Manic
tional wellbeing, is one of the most common and debilitating depression a∑ects 1.2 percent of Americans age 18 or older
mental disorders. Depression is as disabling as coronary disease annually, or 2.2 million individuals. Approximately equal num-
or arthritis. Depressed individuals are 18 times more likely to bers of men and women su∑er from this disorder.
attempt suicide than people with no mental illness. Manic-depressive disorder tends to be chronic, and episodes
Annually, major depression a∑ects five percent of the pop- can become more frequent without treatment. Because manic
ulation or 9.8 million Americans aged 18 years and older. For- depression runs in families, e∑orts are under way to identify the
tunately, 80 percent of patients respond to drugs, psychother- responsible gene or genes.
apy or a combination of the two. Some severely depressed However, manic-depressive patients also can benefit from
patients can be helped with electroconvulsive therapy. a broad array of treatments. One of these is lithium. During the
Depression arises from many causes: biological (including 1940s, researchers showed that lithium injections into guinea
genetic), psychological, environmental or a combination of pigs made them placid, which implied mood-stabilizing e∑ects.
these. Stroke, hormonal disorders, antihypertensives and birth When given to manic patients, lithium calmed them and
control pills also can play a part. enabled them to return to work and live relatively normal lives.
Physical symptoms—disturbances of sleep, sex drive, Regarded as both safe and e∑ective, lithium is often used to
appetite and digestion—are common. Some of these symptoms prevent recurrent episodes.
may reflect the fact that the disorder a∑ects the delicate hor- Other useful medications include anticonvulsants, such as
monal feedback system linking the hypothalamus, the pituitary valproate or carbamazepine, which can have mood-stabilizing
gland and the adrenal glands. For example, many depressed e∑ects and may be especially useful for di≈cult-to-treat bipo-
patients secrete excess cortisol, a stress hormone, and do not lar episodes. Newer anticonvulsant medications, are being
respond appropriately to a hormone that should counter corti- studied to determine how well they work in stabilizing mood
sol suppression. When tested in sleep laboratories, depressed cycles.

32
Challenges

A
ddiction. Drug abuse is one of the nation’s genetic susceptibility or environmental factors, like stress, may
most serious health problems. Indeed, six per- alter the way that people respond to drugs. In addition, the
cent of Americans, roughly 15 million people, development of tolerance—the progressive need that accompa-
abuse drugs on a regular basis. Recent esti- nies chronic use for a higher drug dose to achieve the same
mates show that the abuse of drugs, includ- e∑ect—varies in di∑erent people. So does drug dependence—
ing alcohol and nicotine from tobacco, costs the adaptive physiological state that results in withdrawal
the nation more than $276 billion each year. symptoms when drug use stops. While tolerance and depen-
If continued long enough, drug abuse—often defined as dence are standard responses of the brain and body to the pres-
harmful drug use—can eventually alter the very structure of the ence of drugs, addiction requires that these occur while a moti-
brain, producing a true brain disorder. This disorder is called vational form of dependence—the feeling that a person can’t live
drug addiction or drug dependence. Drug addiction is defined as without a drug, accompanied by negative a∑ective states—is
having lost much control over drug taking, even in the face of also developing. Together these insights on abuse and addic-
adverse physical, personal or social consequences. tion are leading to new therapies.
People abuse drugs for a simple reason: Drugs produce feel- Nicotine Some 57 million Americans were current smokers
ings of pleasure, or they remove feelings of stress and emotional in 1999, and another 7.6 million used smokeless tobacco, mak-
pain. Neuroscientists have found that almost all abused drugs ing nicotine one of the most widely abused substances. Tobacco
produce pleasure by activating a specific network of neurons kills more than 430,000 U.S. citizens each year—more than
called the brain reward system. The circuit is normally involved alcohol, cocaine, heroin, homicide, suicide, car accidents, fire,
in an important type of learning that helps us to stay alive. It is and AIDS combined. Tobacco use is the leading preventable
activated when we fulfill survival functions, such as eating when cause of death in the United States. Smoking is responsible for
we are hungry or drinking when we are thirsty. In turn, our approximately seven percent of total U.S. health care costs, an
brain rewards us with pleasurable feelings that teach us to estimated $80 billion each year. The direct and indirect costs of
repeat the task. Because drugs inappropriately turn on this smoking are estimated at more than $138 billion per year.
reward circuit, people want to repeat drug use. Nicotine acts through the well known cholinergic nicotinic
Neuroscientists have also learned specifically how drugs receptor. This drug can act as both a stimulant and a sedative.
a∑ect neurons to exert their actions. Neurons release special Immediately after exposure to nicotine, there is a “kick” caused
chemicals, called neurotransmitters, to communicate with each in part by the drug’s stimulation of the adrenal glands and
other. Drugs of abuse alter the ways in which neurotransmitters resulting discharge of epinephrine. The rush of adrenaline stim-
carry their messages from neuron to neuron. Some drugs mimic ulates the body and causes a sudden release of glucose as well
neurotransmitters while others block them. Still others alter the as an increase in blood pressure, respiration and heart rate.
way that the neurotransmitters are released or inactivated. The Nicotine also suppresses insulin output from the pancreas,
brain reward system is inappropriately activated because drugs which means that smokers are always slightly hyperglycemic.
alter the chemical messages sent among neurons in this circuit. In addition, nicotine indirectly causes a release of dopamine in
Finally, neuroscientists also have learned that addiction the brain regions that control pleasure and motivation. This is
requires more than the activation of the brain reward system. thought to underlie the pleasurable sensations experienced by
The process of becoming addicted appears to be influenced by many smokers.
many factors. Motivation for drug use is an important one. For Much better understanding of addiction, coupled with the
example, people who take drugs to get high may get addicted, identification of nicotine as an addictive drug, has been instru-
but people who use them properly as medicine rarely do. Also mental in developing treatments. Nicotine gum, the transder-

33
mal patch, nasal spray and inhaler all appear to be equally
COCAINE AND AMPHETAMINES
e∑ective in successfully treating more than one million people
addicted to nicotine. These techniques are used to relieve with-
drawal symptoms, produce less severe physiological alterations
Prefrontal
cortex than tobacco-based systems and generally provide users with
lower overall nicotine levels than they receive with tobacco. The
Nucleus first non-nicotine prescription drug, bupropion, an antidepres-
accumbens
sant marketed as Zyban, has been approved for use as a phar-
Ventral
macological treatment for nicotine addiction. Behavioral treat-
tegmental area ments are important for helping an individual learn coping
skills for both short- and long-term prevention of relapse.
OPIATES
Psychostimulants In 1997, 1.5 million Americans were cur-
rent cocaine users. A popular, chemically altered form of
cocaine, crack, is smoked. It enters the brain in seconds, pro-
Prefrontal
cortex ducing a rush of euphoria and feelings of power and self-
confidence. The key biochemical factor that underlies the rein-
Nucleus
accumbens
forcing e∑ects of psychostimulants is the brain chemical
dopamine. We feel pleasure-like e∑ects when dopamine-
Amygdala
containing neurons release dopamine into specific brain areas
Ventral
tegmental area that include a special portion of the nucleus accumbens.
Cocaine and amphetamines produce their intense feelings of
ALCOHOL
euphoria by increasing the amount of dopamine that is avail-
able to send messages within the brain reward system.
Prefrontal
Cocaine users often go on binges, consuming a large
cortex amount of the drug in just a few days. A “crash” occurs after
this period of intense drug-taking and includes symptoms of
Nucleus
accumbens
emotional and physical exhaustion and depression. These
Amygdala
symptoms may result from an actual crash in dopamine func-
Ventral
tion and the activity of another brain chemical, serotonin, as
Hippocampus tegmental area well as an increase in the response of the brain systems that
react to stress. Vaccines to produce antibodies to cocaine in the
bloodstream are in clinical trials.
BRAIN DRUG REWARD SYSTEMS. Scientists are not certain about Opiates Humans have used opiate drugs, such as mor-
all the structures involved in the human brain reward system. How- phine, for thousands of years. Monkeys and rats readily self-
ever, studies of rat and monkey brains, and brain imaging studies in administer heroin or morphine and, like humans, will become
humans, have provided many clues. These illustrations show what tolerant and physically dependent with unlimited access. With-
areas are most likely part of the reward systems in the human brain. drawal symptoms range from mild flu-like discomfort to major
A central group of structures is common to the actions of all drugs. physical ailments, including severe muscle pain, stomach
These structures include a collection of dopamine-containing neurons cramps, diarrhea and unpleasant mood.
found in the ventral tegmental area. These neurons are connected to Opiates, like psychostimulants, increase the amount of
the nucleus accumbens and other areas, such as the prefrontal cor- dopamine released in the brain reward system and mimic the
tex. Cocaine exerts its e≈ects mainly through this system. Opiates act e∑ects of endogenous opioids such as opioid peptides. Heroin
in this system and many other brain regions, including the amygdala, injected into a vein reaches the brain in 15 to 20 seconds and
that normally use opioid peptides. Opioids are naturally occurring binds to opiate receptors found in many brain regions, includ-
brain chemicals that induce the same actions as drugs, such as heroin ing the reward system. Activation of the receptors in the reward
and morphine. Alcohol activates the core reward system and addi- circuits causes a brief rush of intense euphoria, followed by a
tional structures throughout the brain because it acts where GABA couple of hours of a relaxed, contented state.
and glutamate are used as neurotransmitters. GABA and glutamate Opiates create e∑ects like those elicited by the naturally
are widely distributed in the brain, including the cortex, hippocam- occurring opioid peptides. They relieve pain, depress breath-
pus, amygdala and nucleus accumbens. ing, cause nausea and vomiting, and stop diarrhea—important
medical uses. In large doses, heroin can make breathing shal-

34
NORMAL
Dopamine
Transmitter recycled
cell

Dopamine
Dopamine
transporter

Blood carries cocaine Dopamine


to brain in seconds receptor site Receiver
cell
Crack
cocaine
inhaled
into COCAINE HIGH
lungs Dopamine
not HOW CRACK COCAINE AFFECTS
recycled
THE BRAIN. Crack cocaine takes
Right Left lung
lung the same route as nicotine by
Cocaine entering the bloodstream
blocks
trans- through the lungs. Within sec-
porter
onds, it is carried by the blood
to the brain. The basis for
Heart
increased pleasure occurs at the
gap where the impulses that
represent neural messages are
low or stop altogether—the cause of death in thousands of people who have died of a heroin passed from one neuron to
overdose. another. This gap is called a
A standard treatment for opiate addiction involves methadone, a long-acting oral opiate that synapse. Dopamine-containing
helps keep craving, withdrawal and relapse under control. Methadone helps opiate addicts reha- neurons normally relay their
bilitate themselves by preventing withdrawal symptoms that are powerful motivators of drug use. signals by releasing dopamine
A synthetic opiate, known as LAAM, can block the e∑ects of heroin for up to 72 hours with min- into many synapses. Dopamine
imal side e∑ects when taken orally. In 1993 the Food and Drug Administration approved the use crosses the synapse and fits
of LAAM for treating patients addicted to heroin. Its long duration of action permits dosing just into receptors on the surface of
three times per week, thereby eliminating the need for daily dosing. LAAM will be increasingly the receiving cell. This triggers
available in clinics that already dispense methadone. Naloxone and naltrexone are medications an electrical signal that is
that also block the e∑ects of morphine, heroin and other opiates. As antagonists, they are espe- relayed through the receiver.
cially useful as antidotes. Another medication to treat heroin addiction, buprenorphine, causes Then, to end the signal,
weaker opiate e∑ects and is less likely to cause overdose problems. dopamine molecules break
Alcohol Although legal, alcohol is highly addictive. Alcohol abuse and alcohol addiction away from the receptors and are
(sometimes referred to as alcoholism or alcohol dependence) are the nation’s major drug problem, pumped back into the nerve ter-
with some people being more susceptible to them than others. Nearly 14 million abuse alcohol or minals that released them.
are alcoholic. Fetal alcohol syndrome is the leading preventable cause of mental retardation. It a∑ects Cocaine molecules block the
about 0.5 to 3 of every 1,000 babies born in the United States. Chronic liver diseases, including pump or “transporter,” causing
cirrhosis—the main chronic health problem associated with alcohol addiction—are responsible more dopamine to accumulate in
for more than 25,000 deaths each year. The annual cost of alcohol abuse and addiction is estimated the synapse. Pleasure circuits
at $185 billion. are stimulated again and again,
Genetic and environmental factors contribute to alcoholism, but no single factor or combi- producing euphoria.
nation of factors enables doctors to predict who will become an alcoholic.
Ethanol, the active ingredient in alcoholic beverages, reduces anxiety, tension and inhibitions.
In low doses it may act as a stimulant, whereas at higher doses, it acts as a depressant. In both
cases, it significantly alters mood and behavior. It can also cause heat loss and dehydration.
The drug, which is easily absorbed into the bloodstream and the brain, a∑ects several neuro-
transmitter systems. For example, alcohol’s interaction with the GABA receptor can calm anxi-
ety, impair muscle control and delay reaction time. At higher doses, alcohol also decreases the

35
function of NMDA receptors that recognize the neurotrans- tive and anabolic (body building) e∑ects. It, too, has been asso-
mitter glutamate. This interaction can cloud thinking and even- ciated with sexual assault. Ketamine is another central nervous
tually lead to a coma. system depressant abused as a “date rape” drug. Ketamine, or
Researchers are developing treatments, which interfere with “Special K,” is a rapid-acting general anesthetic. It has sedative-
molecules, such as the opioid peptides, and trigger alcohol’s hypnotic, analgesic and hallucinogenic properties. It is marketed
positive reinforcing e∑ects. One such drug, naltrexone, recently in the U.S. and a number of foreign countries for use as a gen-
has been approved for treating alcoholism. eral anesthetic in both human and veterinary medical practice.
Marijuana This drug can distort perception, and alter the
sense of time, space and self. In certain situations, marijuana Alzheimer’s disease
can produce intense anxiety. One of the most frightening and devastating of all neurologi-
In radioactive tracing studies, scientists found that tetrahy- cal disorders, is the dementia that occurs in the elderly. The
drocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in marijuana, binds most common cause of this illness is Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
to specific receptors, many of which coordinate movement. This Rare before age 60 but increasingly prevalent in each decade
may explain why people who drive after they smoke marijuana thereafter, AD a∑ects an estimated 4 to 5 million Americans.
are impaired. The hippocampus, a structure involved with By the year, 2040, it is predicted to a∑ect approximately 14 mil-
memory storage and learning, also contains many THC recep- lion individuals in the U.S.
tors. This may explain why heavy users or those intoxicated on The earliest symptoms are forgetfulness and memory loss;
marijuana have poor short-term memory and problems pro- disorientation to time or place; and di≈culty with concentra-
cessing complex information. Scientists recently discovered that tion, calculation, language and judgment. Some patients have
these receptors normally bind to a natural internal chemical severe behavioral disturbances and may even become psychotic.
called anandamide, and are now working to see how this nat- The illness is progressive. In the final stages, the a∑ected indi-
ural marijuana a∑ects brain function. vidual is incapable of self-care. Unfortunately, no e∑ective treat-
Club Drugs Ecstasy, Herbal Ecstasy, Rohypnol, GHB and ments exist, and patients usually die from pneumonia or some
ketamine are among the drugs used by some teens and young other complication. AD, which kills 100,000 people a year, is
adults as part of rave and trance events which are generally one of the leading causes of death in the U.S.
night-long dances, often held in warehouses. The drugs are In the earliest stages, the clinical diagnosis of possible or
rumored to increase stamina and to produce intoxicating highs probable AD can be made with greater than 80 percent accu-
that are said to deepen the rave or trance experience. Recent racy. As the course of the disease progresses, the accuracy of
hard science, however, is showing serious damage to several diagnosis at Alzheimer’s research centers exceeds 90 percent.
parts of the brain from use of some of these drugs. The diagnosis depends on medical history, physical and neuro-
Many users tend to experiment with a variety of club drugs logical examinations, psychological testing, laboratory tests and
in combination. This creates a larger problem because combi- brain imaging studies. At present, final confirmation of the
nations of any of these drugs, particularly with alcohol, can lead diagnosis requires examination of brain tissue, usually obtained
to unexpected adverse reactions and even death after high at autopsy.
doses. Physical exhaustion can enhance some toxicities and The causes and mechanisms of the brain abnormalities are
problems. not yet fully understood, but great progress has been made
MDMA, called “Adam,” “Ecstasy,” or “XTC,” on the street, through genetics, biochemistry, cell biology and experimental
is a synthetic, psychoactive drug with hallucinogenic and treatments. Microscopic examination of AD brain tissue shows
amphetamine-like properties. Users encounter problems similar abnormal accumulations of a small fibrillar peptide, termed a
to those found with the use of amphetamines and cocaine. beta amyloid, in the spaces around synapses (neuritic plaques),
Recent research also links Ecstasy use to long-term damage to and by abnormal accumulations of a modified form of the pro-
those parts of the brain critical to thought, memory and pleasure. tein tau in the cell bodies of neurons (neurofibrillary tangles).
Rohypnol, GHB, and ketamine are predominantly central The plaques and tangles are mostly in brain regions important
nervous system depressants. Because they are often colorless, for memory and intellectual functions.
tasteless and odorless, they can be easily added to beverages and In cases of AD, there are reductions in levels of markers for
ingested unknowingly. These drugs have emerged as the so- several neurotransmitters, including acetylcholine, somato-
called “date rape” drugs. When mixed with alcohol, Rohypnol statin, monoamine and glutamate, that allow cells to commu-
can incapacitate a victim and prevent them from resisting sex- nicate with one another. Damage to these neural systems,
ual assault. Also, Rohypnol may be lethal when mixed with which are critical for attention, memory, learning and higher
alcohol and other depressants. Since about 1990, GHB (gamma cognitive abilities, is believed to cause the clinical symptoms.
hydroxy-butyrate) has been abused in the U.S. for euphoric, seda- Approximately five percent to 10 percent of individuals with

36
AD have an inherited form of the disease. These patients often phonology. This is illustrated in di≈culty transforming the let-
have early-onset illness. Recently, scientists have identified ters on the page to the sound structure of the language.
mutations in AD-linked genes on three chromosomes. The gene As children approach adolescence, a manifestation of
encoding the amyloid precursor protein gene is on chromosome dyslexia may be a very slow reading rate. Children may learn to
21. In other families with early-onset AD, mutations have been read words accurately but they will not be fluent or automatic,
identified in the presenilin 1 and 2 genes, which are on chro- reflecting the lingering e∑ects of a phonologic deficit. Because
mosomes 14 and 1, respectively. Apolipoprotein E (apoE), a chro- they are able to read words accurately (albeit very slowly), dyslexic
mosome 19 gene, which influences susceptibility in late life, exists adolescents and young adults may mistakenly be assumed to
in three forms, with apoE4 clearly associated with enhanced risk. have “outgrown” their dyslexia. The ability to read aloud accu-
Treatments are available mostly only for some symptoms of rately, rapidly and with good expression as well as facility with
AD, such as agitation, anxiety, unpredictable behavior, sleep spelling may be most useful clinically in distinguishing students
disturbances and depression. Three drugs treat cognitive symp- who are average from those who are poor readers.
toms in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s. These A range of investigations indicates that there are di∑erences
agents improve memory deficits temporarily and modestly in in the temporo-parieto-occipital brain regions between dyslexic
20 percent to 30 percent of patients. Several other approaches, and non-impaired readers. Recent data using functional brain
such as antioxidants, anti-inflammatories and estrogens, are imaging indicate that dyslexic readers demonstrate a functional
being tested. disruption in an extensive system in the posterior portion of the
An exciting new area of research is the use of approaches brain. The disruption occurs within the neural systems linking
in which genes are introduced in mice. These transgenic mice visual representations of the letters to the phonologic structures
carrying mutant genes linked to inherited AD develop behav- they represent. The specific cause of the disruption in neuronal
ioral abnormalities and some of the cellular changes that occur systems in dyslexia is not entirely understood. However, it is
in humans. It is anticipated that these mice models will prove clear that dyslexia runs in families and can be inherited.
very useful for studying the mechanisms of AD and testing Interventions to help children with dyslexia focus on teach-
novel therapies. ing the child that words can be segmented into smaller units of
Moreover, researchers have begun to knock out genes play- sound and that these sounds are linked with specific letters and
ing critical roles in the production of amyloid. These enzymes, letter patterns. In addition, children with dyslexia require prac-
termed beta and gamma secretase, which cleave the amyloid tice in reading stories, both to allow them to apply their newly
peptide from the precursor, are clearly targets for development acquired decoding skills to reading words in context and to
of drugs to block amyloid. experience reading for meaning.

Learning disorders Stroke


An estimated 10 percent of the population, as many as 25 mil- Until recently, if you or a loved one had a stroke, your doctor
lion Americans, have some form of learning disability involv- would tell your family there was no treatment. In all likelihood,
ing di≈culties in the acquisition and use of listening, speaking, the patient would live out the remaining months or years with
reading, writing, reasoning or mathematical abilities. They severe neurological impairment.
often occur in people with normal or high intelligence. This dismal scenario has now been radically altered. For
Dyslexia, or specific reading disability, is the most common one, use of the clot-dissolving bioengineered drug, tissue plas-
and most carefully studied of the learning disabilities. It a∑ects minogen activator (tPA), is now a standard treatment in many
80 percent of all of those identified as learning-disabled. hospitals. This approach rapidly opens blocked vessels to
Dyslexia is characterized by an unexpected di≈culty in reading restore circulation before oxygen loss causes permanent dam-
in children and adults who otherwise possess the intelligence, age. Given within three hours of a stroke, it often can help in
motivation and schooling considered necessary for accurate and returning patients to normal.
fluent reading. Also, attitudes about the nation’s third leading cause of
Previously, it was believed that dyslexia a∑ected boys pri- death are changing rapidly. Much of this has come from new
marily. However, more recent data indicate similar numbers of and better understandings of the mechanisms that lead to the
boys and girls are affected. Studies indicate that dyslexia is a death of neurons following stroke and devising ways to protect
persistent, chronic condition. It does not represent a tran- these neurons. A variety of chemicals appear to play a role,
sient “developmental lag.” including calcium, potassium and zinc, and may be important
There is now a strong consensus that the central di≈culty in devising new treatments.
in dyslexia reflects a deficit within the language system, and Stroke a∑ects roughly 700,000 Americans a year — 150,000
more specifically, in a component of the language system called of whom die; total annual costs are estimated at $43 billion.

37
STROKE. A stroke occurs when a
blood vessel bringing oxygen and
nutrients to the brain bursts or is
clogged by a blood clot. This lack of
blood can cause cell death within
minutes. One theory is that the
overexcited dying nerve cells re- Blockage

lease neurotransmitters, especially Cell lacking


blood flow
glutamate, onto nearby nerve cells.
These nearby nerve cells become
Glutamate released
overexcited and overloaded with
calcium and die. This is one of the
places where scientists think they
may be able to intervene to stop the
process of cell death. Depending on
its location, a stroke can have
di≈erent symptoms. They include
paralysis on one side of the body
or a loss of speech. The e≈ects of
Overexcited injured cell
stroke are often permanent because
dead brain cells are not replaced.

A stroke occurs when a blood vessel bringing oxygen and cells aids recovery even if administered as long as a day after
nutrients to the brain bursts or is clogged by a blood clot or the injury. Stem cells administered along with a growth factor
some other particle. This deprives the brain of blood, causing resulted in greater improvement than with either treatment
the death of neurons within minutes. Depending on its loca- alone. The double regimen resulted in behavioral improvement
tion, a stroke can cause many permanent disorders, such as as well as decreased stroke-induced brain loss.
paralysis on one side of the body and loss of speech.
Stroke often occurs in individuals over 65 years of age, yet Neurological trauma
a third are younger. Stroke tends to occur more in males and A magic bullet has not been found, but doctors have discovered
blacks and in those with diabetes, high blood pressure, heart several methods to stave o∑ severe neurological damage caused
disease, obesity, high cholesterol and a family history of stroke. by head and spinal cord injuries. These treatments include bet-
In addition to tPA, increased use of preventive measures are ter emergency care, a drug to help reduce damage and improved
battling the disorder. Controlling risk factors such as obesity, rehabilitation techniques.
blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol can help prevent Some 500,000 people su∑er traumatic head injuries requir-
stroke. Other specific treatments involving surgery can clear ing hospitalization each year, and roughly 100,000 die—many
clogs in the arteries of the neck region and help prevent a cut- before reaching the hospital. Economic costs approach $25 bil-
o∑ of blood supply. lion annually.
Treatments that target the heart’s blood flow can prevent Greater use of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic res-
stroke. Surgery can help repair damaged heart valves. Drugs onance imaging (MRI) allows doctors more readily to see poten-
can reduce the chance of clots forming, traveling to the brain tially life-threatening swelling and act immediately more read-
and causing a stroke. ily. Doctors can bore a small hole in the skull and insert a tube
Other experimental therapies under investigation may lead attached to a pressure monitor. When the intracranial pressure
to even bigger payo∑s for patients in the future. Some strate- is above safe levels, the patient is put on a ventilator to increase
gies target mechanisms inside the neuron. In this way, the the breathing rate. The more breaths a patient takes, the more
vicious cycle of local damage followed by a widening fringe of carbon dioxide is blown o∑, helping to shrink cerebral blood
biochemical-induced neuronal death can be slowed. A number vessels and thus reduce intracranial pressure. Drugs, such as
of classes of drugs have been shown to be e∑ective in animal mannitol, help draw water away from the brain.
studies. Doctors also now can identify blood clots with CT and
Another promising possibility is the use of neural stem MRI scans and remove the clots before a patient completely
cells. Some animal studies have shown that an injection of stem deteriorates.

38
An estimated 250,000 individuals are living with spinal attacks, patients may develop anxiety in anticipation of another
cord injury in the U.S. Some 11,000 new injuries are reported attack and avoid public settings where attacks might occur.
annually and are caused mostly by motor vehicle accidents, vio- Untreated, their lives may constrict until they develop agora-
lence and falls. Economic costs approach $10 billion a year. phobia, or the fear of crowds.
Researchers have found that people who su∑er spinal cord The recent discovery of brain receptors for the benzo-
injuries become less severely paralyzed if they receive high diazepine anti-anxiety drugs has sparked research to identify
intravenous doses of a commonly used steroid drug within eight the brain’s own anti-anxiety chemical messengers. This finding
hours after injury. The drug methylprednisolone appears to help may lead to ways to regulate this brain system and correct its
regardless of how severely the spinal cord is injured, and in possible defects in panic disorder. PET scans reveal that dur-
some cases, makes the di∑erence between a patient being ing such attacks, the tip of the brain’s temporal lobe is unusu-
confined to a wheelchair and being able to walk. Building on ally active compared with controls. When normal people expect
this knowledge, researchers hope to decipher the precise order to receive a shock to the finger, the same general area is acti-
of chemical reactions that leads to damage. vated.
Scientists have known that following a complete injury to The serotonin reuptake inhibitors, cognitive behavior ther-
the spinal cord, animals can regain the ability to bear their apy, or a combination are now the first choice treatments of
weight and walk at various speeds on a treadmill belt. More panic disorder. Tricyclic antidepressants, MAO inhibitors and
recently, scientists have recognized that the level of this recov- high-potency benzodiazepines also are e∑ective.
ery is dependent to a large degree on whether these tasks are
practiced—that is, trained—after injury. It appears that humans Schizophrenia
with spinal cord injury also respond to training interventions. Marked by disturbances in thinking, emotional reactions and
social behavior, schizophrenia usually results in chronic illness
Anxiety disorders and personality change. Delusions, hallucinations and thought
The most widespread mental illnesses, anxiety disorders annu- disorder are common.
ally a∑ect an estimated 12.6 percent of the adult population, or A∑ecting about one percent of the population or 2 million
24.8 million Americans. They include phobias, panic disorder Americans a year, schizophrenia is disabling and costly. On a
and agoraphobia and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). given day, these patients occupy up to 100,000 hospital beds.
Some can keep people completely housebound or, as in the case Annual costs total about $32.5 billion.
of panic disorder, contribute to suicide. Schizophrenia is thought to reflect changes in the brain,
In OCD, people become trapped, often for many years, in possibly caused by disease or injury at the time of birth, or a
repetitive thoughts and behaviors, which they recognize as genetic disposition that may be exacerbated by environmental
groundless but cannot stop, such as repeatedly washing hands, stress. Brain systems using dopamine appear to be particularly
or checking doors or stoves. The illness is estimated to a∑ect involved. Brain scans and postmortem studies show abnormal-
3.8 million Americans annually. Social learning and genetics ities in some people with schizophrenia, such as enlarged ven-
may play a role in developing the disorder. But positron emis- tricles (fluid-filled spaces) and reduced size of certain brain
sion tomography (PET) scans reveal abnormalities in both cor- regions. PET scans taken during intellectual tasks show
tical and deep areas of the brain, suggesting a biological com- abnormal functioning in specific brain areas of persons with this
ponent as well. illness.
Scientists recently discovered that certain breeds of large The disorder usually begins in persons between the ages of
dogs that develop acral lick syndrome, severely sore paws through 15 and 25. Some patients fully recover following treatment, but
compulsive licking, respond to the serotonergic antidepressant most continue to have moderate or severe symptoms, particu-
clomipramine, which was the first e∑ective treatment developed larly in response to stress. About 15 percent of patients return
for OCD in people. to normal life after a single episode; 60 percent will have inter-
Serotonergic antidepressants, especially the tricyclics, mittent episodes throughout their lives; another 25 percent will
clomipramine and serotonin reuptake inhibitors are e∑ective in not recover their ability to live as independent adults.
treating OCD. A specialized type of behavioral intervention, After a long search for an e∑ective antipsychotic medica-
exposure and response prevention, is also e∑ective in many tion, scientists synthesized the drug chlorpromazine during the
patients. late 1940s. By the 1950s, it was found useful for treating psy-
Panic disorder, which a∑ects 2.4 million Americans annu- chotic states and later became a mainstay of drug treatment.
ally, usually starts “out of the blue.” Patients experience an over- Since then a large number of agents similar to chlorpro-
whelming sense of impending doom, accompanied by sweat- mazine have been developed. When given as long-acting injec-
ing, weakness, dizziness and shortness of breath. With repeated tions, these drugs reduce some symptoms and aid patients’

39
readiness for adjustment back into the community. However, additional approaches to prevention and treatment of these
chronic use may cause abnormal muscle movements and symptoms as well as the common peripheral neuropathy that
tremors in some patients. Safer treatments are being sought. can aΩict those with AIDS.
Thus far, most drugs are successful in treating hallucina-
tions and thought disorder. Clozapine, acts somewhat dif- Multiple sclerosis
ferently from other antipsychotics. It treats the approximately The most common central nervous system disease of young
30 percent of patients who are not helped by conventional med- adults after epilepsy, multiple sclerosis (MS) is a life-long ail-
ications. However, the drug can induce a potentially fatal blood ment of unknown origin that a∑ects more than 300,000 Amer-
disorder, agranulocytosis, in about one percent of patients. To icans. MS is diagnosed in individuals who are mainly between
prevent this disorder, patients must take regular weekly to the ages of 20 and 50, with two of three cases occurring in
biweekly blood tests, a precaution that makes the use of the women. MS results in earning losses of about $2 billion annu-
drug very costly. Several new antipsychotics—risperidone, olan- ally for families with MS.
zapine and sertindole—are now available. They do not involve Although a cause has yet to be found, MS is thought to be
risk of angranulocytosis but may have other side e∑ects. an autoimmune disease in which the body’s natural defenses act
against the myelin in the central nervous system as though it
Neurological AIDS were foreign tissue. In MS, myelin is destroyed and replaced by
By the end of 2000, some 448,000 deaths and up to 774,000 scars of hardened “sclerotic” patches of tissue. Such lesions are
infections from acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) called “plaques,” and appear in multiple places within the cen-
had occurred in the U.S. This is dwarfed by the more than 21.8 tral nervous system. This can be compared to a loss of insulat-
million deaths and 58 million infections identified worldwide. ing material around an electrical wire, which interferes with the
While the principal target of human immunodeficiency virus transmission of signals. Some nerve fibers are actually cut in
(HIV) is the immune system, the nervous system also may be association with the loss of myelin.
profoundly a∑ected. Some 20 percent to 40 percent of patients Siblings of people with MS are 10 to 15 times more likely
with full-blown AIDS also develop clinically significant than others to be aΩicted by the disorder. In addition, the dis-
dementia that includes movement impairment. Those a∑ected ease is five times more prevalent in temperate zones, such as the
have mental problems ranging from mild di≈culty with con- Northern United States and Northern Europe, than it is in the
centration or coordination to progressive, fatal dementia. tropics. Thus, genetic and environmental factors are probably
Despite advances in treating other aspects of the disease, involved in the cause. An infection acquired during the first
AIDS dementia remains a mystery. Most current hypotheses 15 years of life may be responsible for triggering the disease in
center on an indirect e∑ect of HIV infection related to secreted a genetically susceptible individual.
viral products or cell-coded signal molecules called cytokines. The most common symptoms are blurred vision, awkward
Nonetheless, HIV infection appears to be the prime mover in gait, numbness and fatigue. These can occur singly or in com-
this disorder since antiviral treatment may prevent or reverse bination, vary in intensity and last from several weeks to months.
this condition in some patients. In some patients, symptoms include slurred speech, weakness,
Experts believe that serious neurologic symptoms are loss of coordination, uncontrollable tremors, loss of bladder con-
uncommon early in AIDS infection. But later, patients develop trol, memory problems, depression and paralysis. Muscle spas-
di≈culty with concentration and memory and experience gen- ticity can a∑ect balance and coordination, causing pain and
eral slowing of their mental processes. At the same time, patients involuntary jerking movement—and, if untreated, can create
may develop leg weakness and a loss of balance. Imaging tech- contractures or the “freezing” of a joint that prevents movement.
niques, such as CT and MRI, show that the brains in these MS cannot be cured at present, but several medications
patients have undergone some shrinkage. The examination of control relapsing forms of MS. A wide range of medications
brain cells under a microscope suggests that abnormalities are and therapies are available to control symptoms such as spas-
present principally in subcortical areas. Neurons in the cortex ticity, pain, fatigue, mood swings and bladder, bowel or sexual
also may be altered. dysfunctions. Steroids, which have been used in MS for three
Recent studies indicate that highly active combination anti- decades, e∑ectively shorten attacks and speed recovery from
retroviral treatment (‘cocktails’ of three or more drugs active MS-related optic nerve inflammation. Promising new agents to
against HIV ) is e∑ective in reducing the incidence of AIDS control MS or to alleviate its symptoms are in clinical trials.
dementia. Such treatment also can e∑ectively reverse the cog-
nitive abnormalities attributed to brain HIV infection. Down syndrome
Despite this remarkable progress, some patients develop Down syndrome, the most frequently occurring chromosomal
these problems and fail to respond to treatment, thus requiring abnormality, appears in one out of every 800 to 1,000 babies

40
born. It occurs when an extra copy of chromosome 21 or part of between the ages of 30 and 50. It a∑ects both the basal ganglia
its long arm is present in the egg or, less commonly, the sperm, that controls coordination and the brain cortex, which serves
at the time of conception. It is not known why this error in cell as the center for thought, perception and memory.
division occurs. It is not linked to any environmental or behav- The most recognizable symptoms include involuntary jerk-
ioral factors, either before or during pregnancy. ing movements of the limbs, torso and facial muscles. These are
This disorder is associated with approximately 50 physical often accompanied by mood swings, depression, irritability,
and developmental characteristics. An individual with Down slurred speech and clumsiness. As the disease progresses, com-
syndrome is likely to possess, to varying degrees, some of these mon symptoms include di≈culty swallowing, unsteady gait, loss
characteristics. They include mild to moderate mental retarda- of balance, impaired reasoning and memory problems. Even-
tion, low muscle tone, an upward slant to the eyes, a flat facial tually, the individual becomes totally dependent on others for
profile, an enlarged tongue and an increased risk of congenital care, with death often due to pneumonia, heart failure or
heart defects, respiratory problems and obstructed digestive another complication.
tracts. Diagnosis consists of a detailed clinical examination and
The risk of having a child with this syndrome increases with family history. Brain scans may be helpful. The identification
the age of the mother. At age 35, in 1993 of the gene that causes
the risk is about one in 365 HD has simplified genetic test-
Scientists are moving closer to understand-
births. At age 40, it is one in 110. ing, which can be used to help
However, it is important to note confirm a diagnosis. However,
ing the role that the genes on chromosome
that the average age of women HD researchers and genetic
who give birth to children with counselors have established
21 play in Down syndrome.
Down syndrome is 28. This is specific protocols for predictive
because younger women are giv- testing to ensure that the psy-
ing birth more often. chological and social consequences of a positive or negative
Prenatal screening tests, such as the Triple Screen and result are understood. Predictive testing is available only for
Alpha-fetaprotein Plus, can accurately detect about 60 percent adults, though children under 18 may be tested to confirm a
of fetuses with Down syndrome. diagnosis of juvenile onset HD. Prenatal testing may be per-
Babies with Down syndrome will develop much like typi- formed. The ethical issues of testing must be considered and
cal children, but at a somewhat slower rate. They will learn to the individual adequately informed, because there is no e∑ective
sit, walk, talk and toilet train, just like their peers. Early inter- treatment or cure.
vention programs can begin shortly after birth and can help fos- The HD mutation is an expanded triplet repeat in the HD
ter an infant’s development. gene—a kind of molecular stutter in the DNA. This abnormal
Down syndrome patients have been able to have longer and gene codes for an abnormal protein called huntingtin. The
fuller lives, thanks to medical advances and a greater under- huntingtin protein, whose normal function is still obscure, is
standing of the potential of those with this condition. Individ- widely distributed in the brain and appears to be associated
uals with Down syndrome are being educated in their neigh- with the intracellular machinery involved in the transport of
borhood schools, participating in community activities and proteins. But the cause of HD probably involves a gain of a new
finding rewarding employment and relationships. and toxic function. Cell and transgenic animal models can
Although there is no cure or means of preventing Down replicate many features of the disease and are now being used
syndrome, scientists are moving closer to understanding the role to test new theories and therapies. Many researchers hope that
that the genes on chromosome 21 play in a person’s develop- transplanted or resident stem cells may one day be able to
ment. Once this mystery is understood, they hope to decode the replace the neurons that have been lost to the disease.
biochemical processes that occur in Down syndrome and treat
or cure this disorder. Tourette syndrome
One of the most common and least understood neurobiological
Huntington’s disease disorders, Tourette syndrome (TS) is a genetic condition that
A∑ecting some 30,000 Americans and placing another 150,000 a∑ects an estimated one in 500 Americans, roughly 200,000 peo-
at risk, Huntington’s disease (HD) is now considered one of the ple. Males are a∑ected three to four times as frequently as
most common hereditary brain disorders. The disease that killed females.
folk singer Woody Guthrie in 1967 progresses slowly over a ten Symptoms usually appear between the ages of four and
to 20-year period and eventually robs the a∑ected individual of eight, but in rare cases may emerge as late as age 18. The symp-
the ability to walk, talk, think and reason. HD usually appears toms include motor and vocal tics that are repetitive, involuntary

41
movements or utterances that are rapid and sudden. The types Immunotherapy uses the body’s own immune system against the
of tics may change frequently, and increase or decrease in sever- tumor. Promising areas of research include bioengineered genes,
ity over time. Generally, this disorder lasts a lifetime, but one- monoclonal antibodies that attach to specifically targeted cells;
third of patients may experience a remission or decrease in growth factors; angiogenesis inhibitors and di∑erentiation thera-
symptoms as they get older. Most people with TS do not pies; targeted toxins; and tumor vaccines.
require medication; their symptoms are mild and do not a∑ect
functioning. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
The disorder seems to result from a hypersensitivity of This fatal disorder strikes 5,000 Americans annually with 50
dopamine receptors. Another neurotransmitter, serotonin, also percent of patients dying within three to five years of diagno-
has been implicated. The most e∑ective drugs for control of sis. It is the most common disorder within a group of diseases
movements, such as haloperidol, act by blocking the overactive a∑ecting movement and costs Americans some $300 million
system. Other symptoms, such as obsessive-compulsive traits annually.
and attention deficit disorder, often require treatment with Commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, amyotrophic
other classes of drugs that act on serotonin. lateral sclerosis (ALS) destroys neurons that control voluntary
The neuroleptic drugs haloperidol and pimozide have been muscle movements, such as walking. For reasons that are not
the mainstays of treatment. They are not perfect medications, understood, brain and spinal motor neurons in the spinal cord
however, because they can cause disturbing side e∑ects— begin to disintegrate. Because signals from the brain are not
abnormal involuntary movements, sti∑ness of the face and carried by these damaged nerves to the body, the muscles begin
limbs, or sedation and weight gain in some patients. Recently, to weaken and deteriorate from the lack of stimulation and use.
newer medications have been found e∑ective in some patients. The first signs of progressive paralysis are usually seen in
the hands and feet. They include leg weakness, walking
Brain tumors di≈culty, and clumsiness of the hands when washing and dress-
Although brain tumors are not always malignant—a condition ing. Eventually, almost all muscles under voluntary control,
that spreads and becomes potentially lethal—these growths are including those of the respiratory system, are a∑ected. Despite
always serious because they can cause pressure in the brain and the paralysis, the mind and the senses remain intact. Death is
compression of nearby structures, interfering with normal brain usually caused by respiratory failure or pneumonia.
activity. No specific test identifies ALS; but muscle biopsies, blood
Primary brain tumors arise within the brain while sec- studies, electrical tests of muscle activity, CT and MRI scans
ondary brain tumors spread from other parts of the body and X-rays of the spinal cord help identify the disease and rule
through the bloodstream. For tumors starting in the brain, out other disorders. Still, diagnosis is often di≈cult because its
about 60 percent of which are malignant, the cause is unknown. causes remain unknown. Potential causes include glutamate
Tumors that begin as cancer elsewhere and spread to the brain toxicity, oxidative stress, factors in the environment and an
are always malignant. autoimmune response in which the body’s defenses turn against
The incidence of primary brain tumors is about 12 per body tissue.
100,000 population. About 36,000 new cases occur in the In about 90 percent of cases, ALS is sporadic, arising in
United States annually. Because of di≈culties diagnosing and individuals with no known family history of the disorder. In the
classifying brain tumors, exact statistics on secondary tumors other 10 percent of cases, it is familial—transmitted to family
are unknown. members because of a gene defect.
Symptoms vary according to location and size. The com- Scientists recently found a gene responsible for one form of
pression of brain tissue or nerve tracts, as well as expansion of ALS. Mutations in the gene that codes for super oxide dismu-
the tumor, can cause symptoms such as seizures, headaches, tase located on chromosome 21 were linked to the presence of
muscle weakness, loss of vision or other sensory problems and this disorder. Scientists believe that whatever they learn from
speech di≈culties. An expanding tumor can increase pressure studying the gene will have relevance for understanding other
within the skull, causing headache, vomiting, visual distur- forms of motor neuron disease.
bances and impaired mental functioning. Brain tumors are Once diagnosed, physical therapy and rehabilitation meth-
diagnosed with MRI and CT scanning. ods help strengthen unused muscles. Various drugs can ease
Surgery is a common treatment if the tumor is accessible specific problems like twitching and muscle weakness, but there
and vital structures will not be disturbed. Radiation is used to is no cure. An antiglutamate drug modestly slows down the dis-
stop a tumor’s growth or cause it to shrink. Chemotherapy ease. Additional drugs are now under study. Protecting or
destroys tumor cells that may remain after surgery and radia- regenerating motor neurons using nerve growth factors and
tion. Steroid drugs relieve swelling and other symptoms. stem cells may someday provide significant hope for patients.

42
New diagnostic methods

M
any of the recent advances in understand- and Parkinson’s disease. Within the next few years, PET could
ing the brain are due to the development enable scientists to identify the biochemical nature of neuro-
of techniques that allow scientists to di- logical and mental disorders and determine how well therapy
rectly monitor neurons throughout the is working in patients. For instance, depression produces very
body. marked changes in the brain as seen by PET. Knowing the
Electrophysiological recordings trace location of these changes helps researchers understand better
brain electrical activity in response to a specific external stim- the causes of depression and monitor the e∑ectiveness of
ulus. In this method, electrodes placed in specific parts of the specific treatments.
brain—depending on which sensory system is being tested— Another technique, single photon emission computed tomog-
make recordings that are then processed by a computer. The raphy (SPECT), is similar to PET but its pictures are not as
computer makes an analysis based on the time lapse between detailed. SPECT is much less expensive than PET because the
stimulus and response. It then extracts this information from tracers it uses have a longer half-life and do not require a nearby
background activity. accelerator to produce them.
Following the discovery that material is transported within Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) Providing a high-
neurons, methods have been developed to visualize activity and quality, three-dimensional image of organs and structures
precisely track fiber connections within the nervous system. inside the body without X-rays or other radiation, MRI images
This can be done by injecting a radioactive amino acid into the are unsurpassed in anatomical detail and may reveal minute
brain of an experimental animal; the animal is killed a few changes that occur with time.
hours later; and then the presence of radioactive cells is visual- MRI is expected to tell scientists when structural abnor-
ized on film. In another technique, the enzyme horseradish per- malities first appear in the course of a disease, how they a∑ect
oxidase is injected and taken up by nerve fibers that can be later subsequent development and precisely how their progression
identified under a microscope. correlates with mental and emotional aspects of a disorder.
These and other methods have resulted in many advances During the 15-minute MRI imaging procedure, a patient
in knowledge about the workings of the nervous system and are lies inside a massive, hollow, cylindrical magnet and is exposed
still useful today. New methods, safely applicable to humans, to a powerful, steady magnetic field. The protons of the body’s
promise to give even more precise information, particularly hydrogen atoms, especially those in water and fat, normally
about the point of origin of disorders such as epilepsy. point randomly in di∑erent directions, but in a very strong
magnetic field (many times the earth’s magnetic field) they line
Imaging techniques up parallel to each other like rows of tiny bar magnets. If the
Positron emission tomography (PET) This method of measur- hydrogen nuclei are then knocked out of alignment by a strong
ing brain function is based on the detection of radioactivity pulse of radio waves, they produce a detectable radio signal as
emitted when positrons, positively charged particles, undergo they fall back into alignment.
radioactive decay in the brain. Substances labeled with Magnetic coils in the machine detect these signals and a
positron-emitting radionuclides are used to produce three- computer changes them into an image based on di∑erent types
dimensional PET images that reflect blood flow as well as of body tissue. Tissue that contains a lot of water and fat pro-
metabolic and chemical activity in the brain. duces a bright image; tissue that contains little or no water, such
So far, PET studies have helped scientists understand more as bone, appears black. (The image is similar to that produced
about how drugs a∑ect the brain and what happens during by CT scanning, but MRI generally gives much greater con-
learning, language and certain brain disorders—such as stroke trast between normal and abnormal tissues.)

43
MRI allows images to be constructed in any plane and is somes in the nucleus of every human cell.
particularly valuable in studying the brain and spinal cord. It New gene diagnosis techniques now make it possible to find
reveals tumors rapidly and vividly, indicating their precise extent. the chromosomal location of genes responsible for neurologic
MRI provides early evidence of potential damage from stroke, and psychiatric diseases and to identify structural changes in
thus allowing physicians to administer proper treatments early. these genes that are responsible for causing disease.
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), a technique related to This information is useful for identifying individuals who
MRI which uses the same machinery but examines molecular carry faulty genes and thereby improving diagnosis; for under-
composition and metabolic processes, rather than anatomy, also standing the precise cause of diseases in order to improve meth-
holds great promise to provide insights into how the brain ods of prevention and treatment; and for evaluating the malig-
works. By measuring the molecular and metabolic changes that nancy and susceptibility of certain tumors.
occur in the brain, MRS has already provided new information So far, scientists have identified defective genes for more
on brain development and aging, Alzheimer’s disease, schizo- than 50 neurological disorders and the chromosomal location of
phrenia, autism and stroke. Because this method is noninvasive, the defect in up to 100. Prenatal or carrier tests exist for many
it is ideally suited to study the natural course of a disease or its of the most prevalent of these illnesses.
response to treatment. Scientists have tracked down the gene on chromosome 4
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) Another that goes awry in Huntington’s patients. The defect is an expan-
exciting recent development in imaging is fMRI. This technique sion of a CAG repeat. CAG is the genetic code for the amino
measures brain activity under resting and activated conditions. acid glutamine, and the expanded repeat results in a long string
It combines the high spatial resolution, noninvasive imaging of of glutamines within the protein. This expansion appears to
brain anatomy o∑ered by standard MRI with a strategy for alter the protein’s function. Scientists have found that the size
detecting changes in blood oxygenation levels driven by neuronal of the expanded repeat in an individual is predictive of Hunt-
activity. This technique allows for more detailed maps of brain ington’s disease. Other neurodegenerative disorders have been
areas underlying human mental activities in health and disease. identified as due to expanded CAG repeats in other genes. The
To date, fMRI has been applied to the study of various functions mechanisms by which these expansions caused adult onset neuro-
of the brain ranging from primary sensory responses to cognitive degeneration is the focus of intense research.
activities. While the exact origin of the signal changes found in Sometimes patients with single gene disorders are found to
fMRI is still under debate, the success of fMRI in numerous have a chromosomal abnormality—a deletion or break in the
studies has clearly demonstrated its great potential. DNA sequence of the gene—that can lead scientists to a more
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) One of the latest advances accurate position of the disease gene. This is the case with some
in scanners, MEG reveals the source of weak magnetic fields abnormalities found on the X-chromosome in patients with
emitted by neurons. An array of cylinder-shaped sensors mon- Duchenne muscular dystrophy and on chromosome 13 in patients
itor the magnetic field pattern near the patient’s head to deter- with inherited retinoblastoma, a rare childhood eye tumor that
mine the positions and strengths of activity in various regions of can lead to blindness and other cancers.
the brain. In contrast with other imaging techniques, MEG can Gene mapping has led to the localization on chromosome
characterize rapidly changing patterns of neural activity with 21 of the gene coding the beta amyloid precursor protein that is
millisecond resolution and provide a quantitative measure of its abnormally cut to form the smaller peptide, beta amyloid. It is
strength for individual subjects. Moreover, by presenting stimuli this peptide that accumulates in the senile plaques that clog the
at various rates, it is possible to determine how long the neural brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease. This discovery shed
activation is sustained in the diverse brain areas that respond. light on the reason why individuals with Down syndrome (Tri-
One of the most exciting developments in imaging is the somy 21) invariably accumulate amyloid deposits: they make too
combined use of information from fMRI and MEG. The for- much amyloid as a consequence of having three copies instead
mer provides detailed information about the areas of brain activ- of two copies of this gene. Mutations in this gene have recently
ity in a particular task whereas MEG tells researcher and physi- been shown to underlie Alzheimer’s in a distinct subset of these
cian when they become active. The combined use of this patients.
information allows a much more precise understanding of how Several other genetic factors have been identified in
the brain works in health and disease. Alzheimer’s disease, including genes for two proteins, presenilin
1 and presenilin 2, located on chromosomes 14 and 1. A risk fac-
Gene diagnosis tor for late onset Alzheimer’s is the gene for the apolipoprotein
The inherited blueprint for all human characteristics, genes E protein located on chromosome 19.
consist of short sections of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the Gene mapping has enabled doctors to diagnose Fragile X
long, spiraling, helix structure found on the 23 pairs of chromo- mental retardation, the most common cause of inherited mental

44
retardation. Scientists now believe they have identified this gene. order—are still unknown.
Several groups of scientists are investigating whether there Scientists also are studying the genes in mitochondria, struc-
are genetic components to schizophrenia, manic depression and tures found outside the cell nucleus that have their own genome
alcoholism, but their findings are not yet conclusive. and are responsible for the production of energy used by the
Overall, the characterizations of the structure and function cell. Recently, di∑erent mutations in mitochondrial genes were
of individual genes causing diseases of the brain and nervous found to cause several rare neurological disorders. Some scien-
system are in the early stages. Factors that determine variations tists speculate that an inheritable variation in mitochondrial
in the genetic expression of a single-gene abnormality—such DNA may play a role in diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkin-
as what contributes to the early or late start or severity of a dis- son’s and some childhood diseases of the nervous system.

THE CELL

CHROMOSOME

Nucleus

DNA DOUBLE HELIX

Cell membrane

Mitochondria

Paired
bases Linked
sequence pairs
DNA chains

Cytosine (C)
Adenine (A)
Bases
Guanine (G)
Thymine (T)

ANATOMY OF A GENE. Within the nucleus of every human cell, two long, threadlike strands of DNA encode the instructions for making all the pro-
teins necessary for life. Each cell holds more than 50,000 di≈erent genes found on 23 paired chromosomes of tightly coiled DNA. Each strand of
DNA bears four types of coding molecules—adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). The sequence of coding molecules in a gene
(segment of DNA) is the code for protein manufacture.

45
Potential therapies

N
ew drugs. Most drugs used today were devel- neurons. Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Lou Gehrig’s diseases
oped using trial-and-error techniques that often may be treated in the future with trophic factors or their genes.
do not reveal why a drug produces a particular Because the destruction of neurons that use acetylcholine
e∑ect. But the expanding knowledge gained is one feature of Alzheimer’s disease, any substance that can
from the new methods of molecular biology— prevent this destruction is an important topic of research. NGF,
the ability to make a receptor gene and deter- which can do this, also holds promise for slowing the memory
mine its structure—make it possible to design safer and more deficits associated with normal aging.
e∑ective drugs. Once a trophic factor for a particular cell is found, copies
In a test tube, the potency of an agent can be determined of the factor can be genetically targeted to the area of the brain
by how well it binds to a receptor. A scientist then can vary the where this type of cell has died. The treatment may not cure a
drug’s structure to enhance its action on the receptor. Thus, disease but could improve symptoms and delay progression.
subsequent generations of drugs can be designed to interact In an interesting twist on growth factor therapy, researchers
with the receptors more e≈ciently, producing higher potency for the first time demonstrated that a neutralization of
and fewer side e∑ects. inhibitory molecules can help repair damaged nerve fiber tracts
While this “rational drug design” holds promise for devel- in the spinal cord. Using antibodies to Nogo-A, a protein that
oping drugs for conditions ranging from stroke and migraine inhibits nerve regeneration, Swiss researchers succeeded in get-
headaches to depression and anxiety, it will take considerable ting nerves of damaged spinal cords in rats to regrow. Treated
e∑ort to clarify the role of the di∑erent receptors in these dis- rats showed large improvements in their ability to walk after
orders. spinal cord damage.
In these experiments, scientists cut one of the major groups
Trophic factors of nerve fiber tracts in the spinal cord that connect the spinal
One result of basic neuroscience research involves the discov- cord and the brain. When an antibody, directed against the fac-
ery of numerous survival or trophic factors found in the brain that tor Nogo-A, was administered to the spinal cords or the brains
control the development and survival of specific groups of neu- of adult rats, “massive sprouting” of nerve fibers occurred where
rons. Once the specific actions of these molecules and their the spinal cord had been cut. Within two to three weeks, neu-
receptors are identified and their genes cloned, procedures can rons grew to the lower level of the spinal cord and in some ani-
be developed to modify trophic factor-regulated function in ways mals along its whole length. In untreated spinal cord-injured
that might be useful in the treatment of neurological disorders. rats, the maximum distance of nerve regrowth rarely exceeded
Already, researchers have demonstrated the possible value one-tenth of an inch. This research could eventually have clin-
of at least one of these factors, nerve growth factor (NGF). ical implications for spinal cord or brain-damaged people.
Infused into the brains of rats, NGF prevented cell death and
stimulated the regeneration and sprouting of damaged neurons Cell and gene therapy
that are known to die in Alzheimer’s disease. When aged ani- Researchers throughout the world are pursuing a variety of new
mals with learning and memory impairments were treated with ways to repair or replace healthy neurons and other cells in the
NGF, scientists found that these animals were able to remem- brain. Most of the experimental approaches are still being worked
ber a maze task as well as healthy aged rats. out in animals and cannot be considered real therapies at this
Recently, several new factors have been identified and are time.
beginning to be studied. They are potentially useful for ther- Scientists have identified an embryonic neuronal stem cell—
apy, but scientists must first understand how they may influence an unspecialized cell that gives rise to cells with specific func-

46
Patient with
a neurological
disease

CELL AND GENE THERAPY. In


potential therapy techniques,
scientists plan to insert genetic
material for a beneficial neuro-
transmitter or trophic factor into
stem cells or a virus. The cells or
virus are then put into a syringe
and injected into the patient
where they will produce the
beneficial molecule and, it is
Virus
hoped, improve symptoms.

Stem cells

New genetic
material

tions. They have located this type of cell in the brain and spinal modified to carry new genes to cells in tissue culture and in the
cord of embryonic and adult mice that can be stimulated to rodent central nervous system. HSV and adenovirus vectors
divide by known proteins, epidermal growth factor and fibrob- have also been evaluated in early-stage human trials for treat-
last growth factor. The stem cells can continuously produce all ing brain tumors.
three major cell types of the brain—neurons; astrocytes, the cells In one gene therapy experiment, scientists created an ani-
that nourish and protect neurons; and oligodendrocytes, the cells mal model of Parkinson’s disease (PD) in rhesus monkeys. One
that surround axons and allow them to conduct their signals week later, these monkeys received injections of the glial cell-
e≈ciently. Someday their production abilities may become use- derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) gene into the striatum
ful for replacing missing neurons. A very similar stem cell also and substantia nigra using a lentiviral vector system. The
has been discovered in the adult nervous system in various nigrostriatal system is the main brain area a∑ected by PD. The
kinds of tissue, raising the possibility that these stem cells can injections reversed the motor deficits seen on a clinical rating
be pharmacologically directed to replace damaged neurons. scale and a hand-reach task for up to three months. PET scans
In other work, researchers are studying a variety of viruses showed that these animals displayed marked increases in mea-
that may ultimately be used to act as “Trojan horses” to carry sures of dopamine, a chemical that is deficient in patients. Post-
therapeutic genes to the brain to correct nervous system dis- mortem studies revealed a comprehensive protection in striatal
eases. The viruses include herpes simplex type 1 virus (HSV), ade- dopamine as well as the number of nigrostriatal neurons. The
novirus, lentivirus, adeno-associated virus and others naturally results support the concept that lentiviral delivery of GDNF
attracted to neurons. All have been found to be capable of being may provide neuroprotection for patients with early PD.

47
Glossary

ACETYLCHOLINE A neurotransmitter in both the brain, where it AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM A part of the peripheral ner-
regulates memory, and in the peripheral nervous system, vous system responsible for regulating the activity of internal
where it controls the actions of skeletal and smooth muscle. organs. It includes the sympathetic and parasympathetic ner-
ACTION POTENTIAL This occurs when a neuron is activated and vous systems.
temporarily reverses the electrical state of its interior mem- AXON The fiberlike extension of a neuron by which the cell
brane from negative to positive. This electrical charge travels sends information to target cells.
along the axon to the neuron’s terminal where it triggers the BASAL GANGLIA Clusters of neurons, which include the cau-
release of a neurotransmitter. date nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus and substantia nigra,
ADRENAL CORTEX An endocrine organ that secretes corticos- located deep in the brain that play an important role in move-
teroids for metabolic functions; for example, in response to ment. Cell death in the substantia nigra contributes to Parkin-
stress. son’s disease.
ADRENAL MEDULLA An endocrine organ that secretes epineph- BRAINSTEM The major route by which the forebrain sends
rine and norepinephrine in concert with the activation of the information to and receives information from the spinal cord
sympathetic nervous system; for example, in response to stress. and peripheral nerves. The brainstem controls, among other
AGONIST A neurotransmitter, a drug or other molecule that things, respiration and regulation of heart rhythms.
stimulates receptors to produce a desired reaction. BROCA’S AREA The brain region located in the frontal lobe of
ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE The major cause of dementia most the left hemisphere that is important for the production of
prevalent in the elderly, it inflicts enormous human financial speech.
cost on society. The disease is characterized by death of neu- CATECHOLAMINES The neurotransmitters dopamine, epineph-
rons in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex and other brain rine and norepinephrine that are active both in the brain and
regions. the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. These three mole-
AMINO ACID TRANSMITTERS The most prevalent neurotrans- cules have certain structural similarities and are part of a
mitters in the brain, these include glutamate and aspartate, larger class of neurotransmitters known as monoamines.
which have excitatory actions, and glycine and gamma-amino CEREBELLUM A large structure located at the roof of the hind-
butyric acid (GABA), which have inhibitory actions. brain that helps control movement by making connections to
AMYGDALA A structure in the forebrain that is an important the pons, medulla, spinal cord and thalamus. It also may be
component of the limbic system and plays a central role in involved in aspects of motor learning.
emotional learning. CEREBRAL CORTEX The outermost layer of the cerebral hemi-
ANDROGENS Sex steroid hormones, including testosterone, spheres of the brain. It is responsible for all forms of conscious
found in higher levels in males than females. They are respon- experience, including perception, emotion, thought and plan-
sible for male sexual maturation. ning.
ANTAGONIST A drug or other molecule that blocks receptors. CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES The two specialized halves of the
Antagonists inhibit the e∑ects of agonists. brain. The left hemisphere is specialized for speech, writing,
APHASIA Disturbance in language comprehension or produc- language and calculation; the right hemisphere is specialized
tion, often as a result of a stroke. for spatial abilities, face recognition in vision and some aspects
AUDITORY NERVE A bundle of nerve fibers extending from the of music perception and production.
cochlea of the ear to the brain, which contains two branches: CEREBROSPINAL FLUID A liquid found within the ventricles of
the cochlear nerve that transmits sound information and the the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord.
vestibular nerve that relays information related to balance. CHOLECYSTOKININ A hormone released from the lining of the

48
stomach during the early stages of digestion which acts as a DRUG ADDICTION Loss of control over drug intake or compul-
powerful suppressant of normal eating. It also is found in the sive seeking and taking of drugs, despite adverse consequences.
brain. ENDOCRINE ORGAN An organ that secretes a hormone directly
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM A cycle of behavior or physiological into the bloodstream to regulate cellular activity of certain
change lasting approximately 24 hours. other organs.
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING Learning in which a stimulus that ENDORPHINS Neurotransmitters produced in the brain that
naturally produces a specific response (unconditioned stimu- generate cellular and behavioral e∑ects like those of morphine.
lus) is repeatedly paired with a neutral stimulus (conditioned EPILEPSY A disorder characterized by repeated seizures,
stimulus). As a result, the conditioned stimulus can evoke a which are caused by abnormal excitation of large groups of
response similar to that of the unconditioned stimulus. neurons in various brain regions. Epilepsy can be treated with
COCHLEA A snail-shaped, fluid-filled organ of the inner ear many types of anticonvulsant medications.
responsible for transducing motion into neurotransmission to EPINEPHRINE A hormone, released by the adrenal medulla
produce an auditory sensation. and specialized sites in the brain, that acts with norepineph-
COGNITION The process or processes by which an organism rine to a∑ect the sympathetic division of the autonomic ner-
gains knowledge or becomes aware of events or objects in its vous system. Sometimes called adrenaline.
environment and uses that knowledge for comprehension and ESTROGENS A group of sex hormones found more abun-
problem-solving. dantly in females than males. They are responsible for female
CONE A primary receptor cell for vision located in the retina. sexual maturation and other functions.
The cone is sensitive to color and used primarily for daytime EVOKED POTENTIALS A measure of the brain’s electrical activ-
vision. ity in response to sensory stimuli. This is obtained by placing
CORPUS CALLOSUM The large bundle of nerve fibers linking electrodes on the surface of the scalp (or more rarely, inside
the left and right cerebral hemispheres. the head), repeatedly administering a stimulus and then using
CORTISOL A hormone manufactured by the adrenal cortex. In a computer to average the results.
humans, cortisol is secreted in greatest quantities before EXCITATION A change in the electrical state of a neuron that
dawn, readying the body for the activities of the coming day. is associated with an enhanced probability of action potentials.
DEPRESSION A mental disorder characterized by depressed FOLLICLE-STIMULATING HORMONE A hormone released by the
mood and abnormalities in sleep, appetite and energy level. pituitary gland that stimulates the production of sperm in the
DENDRITE A tree-like extension of the neuron cell body. Along male and growth of the follicle (which produces the egg) in
with the cell body, it receives information from other neurons. the female.
DOPAMINE A catecholamine neurotransmitter known to FOREBRAIN The largest division of the brain, which includes
have multiple functions depending on where it acts. the cerebral cortex and basal ganglia. The forebrain is cred-
Dopamine-containing neurons in the substantia nigra of the ited with the highest intellectual functions.
brainstem project to the caudate nucleus and are destroyed FRONTAL LOBE One of the four divisions (parietal, temporal,
in Parkinson’s victims. Dopamine is thought to regulate occipital) of each hemisphere of the cerebral cortex. The
emotional responses and play a role in schizophrenia and frontal lobe has a role in controlling movement and in the
drug abuse. planning and coordinating of behavior.
DORSAL HORN An area of the spinal cord where many nerve GAMMA-AMINO BUTYRIC ACID (GABA) An amino acid trans-
fibers from peripheral pain receptors meet other ascending mitter in the brain whose primary function is to inhibit the
and descending nerve fibers. firing of neurons.

49
GLIA Specialized cells that nourish and support neurons. MANIA A mental disorder characterized by excessive excite-
GLUTAMATE An amino acid neurotransmitter that acts to ment, exalted feelings, elevated mood, psychomotor over-
excite neurons. Glutamate stimulates N-methyl-D-aspartate activity and overproduction of ideas. It may be associated
(NMDA) receptors that have been implicated in activities with psychosis; for example, delusions of grandeur.
ranging from learning and memory to development and MELATONIN Produced from serotonin, melatonin is released
specification of nerve contacts in a developing animal. Stimu- by the pineal gland into the bloodstream. Melatonin a∑ects
lation of NMDA receptors may promote beneficial changes, physiological changes related to time and lighting cycles.
while overstimulation may be a cause of nerve cell damage or MEMORY CONSOLIDATION The physical and psychological
death in neurological trauma and stroke. changes that take place as the brain organizes and restruc-
GONAD Primary sex gland: testis in the male and ovary in the tures information in order to make it a permanent part of
female. memory.
GROWTH CONE A distinctive structure at the growing end of METABOLISM The sum of all physical and chemical changes
most axons. It is the site where new material is added to the that take place within an organism and all energy transforma-
axon. tions that occur within living cells.
HIPPOCAMPUS A seahorse-shaped structure located within MIDBRAIN The most anterior segment of the brainstem.
the brain and considered an important part of the limbic sys- Along with the pons and medulla, the midbrain is involved in
tem. It functions in learning, memory and emotion. many functions, including regulation of heart rate, respira-
HORMONES Chemical messengers secreted by endocrine tion, pain perception and movement.
glands to regulate the activity of target cells. They play a role MITOCHONDRIA Small cylindrical particles inside cells that
in sexual development, calcium and bone metabolism, growth provide energy for the cell by converting sugar and oxygen
and many other activities. into special energy molecules, called ATP.
HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE A movement disorder caused by MONOAMINE OXIDASE (MAO) The brain and liver enzyme that
death of neurons in the basal ganglia and other brain regions. normally breaks down the catecholamines norepinephrine,
It is characterized by abnormal movements called chorea— dopamine, and epinephrine and other monosomines such as
sudden, jerky movements without purpose. serotonin.
HYPOTHALAMUS A complex brain structure composed of MOTOR NEURON A neuron that carries information from the
many nuclei with various functions. These include regulating central nervous system to muscle.
the activities of internal organs, monitoring information from MYASTHENIA GRAVIS A disease in which acetylcholine recep-
the autonomic nervous system, controlling the pituitary gland tors on muscle cells are destroyed so that muscles can no
and regulating sleep and appetite. longer respond to the acetylcholine signal in order to con-
INHIBITION In reference to neurons, it is a synaptic message tract. Symptoms include muscular weakness and progressively
that prevents the recipient cell from firing. more common bouts of fatigue. The disease’s cause is unknown
IONS Electrically charged atoms or molecules. but is more common in females than in males and usually
LIMBIC SYSTEM A group of brain structures—including the strikes between the ages of 20 and 50.
amygdala, hippocampus, septum, basal ganglia and others— MYELIN Compact fatty material that surrounds and insulates
that help regulate the expression of emotion and emotional axons of some neurons.
memory. NERVE GROWTH FACTOR A substance whose role is to guide
LONG-TERM MEMORY The final phase of memory in which neuronal growth during embryonic development, especially
information storage may last from hours to a lifetime. in the peripheral nervous system. Nerve growth factor also

50
probably helps sustain neurons in the adult. to be a necessary step in allowing some neurotransmitters to
NEURON Nerve cell. It is specialized for the transmission of act and is often the result of second messenger activity.
information and characterized by long fibrous projections PINEAL GLAND An endocrine organ found in the brain. In
called axons and shorter, branch-like projections called some animals, the pineal gland serves as a light-influenced
dendrites. biological clock.
NEUROTRANSMITTER A chemical released by neurons at a PITUITARY GLAND An endocrine organ closely linked with the
synapse for the purpose of relaying information to other hypothalamus. In humans, the gland is composed of two lobes
neurons via receptors. and secretes a number of hormones that regulate the activity
NOCICEPTORS In animals, nerve endings that signal the sensa- of other endocrine organs in the body.
tion of pain. In humans, they are called pain receptors. PONS A part of the hindbrain that, with other brain struc-
NOREPINEPHRINE A catecholamine neurotransmitter, pro- tures, controls respiration and regulates heart rhythms. The
duced both in the brain and in the peripheral nervous system. pons is a major route by which the forebrain sends informa-
It is involved in arousal, and regulation of sleep, mood and tion to and receives information from the spinal cord and
blood pressure. peripheral nervous system.
OCCIPITAL LOBE One of the four subdivisions of the cerebral PSYCHOSIS A severe symptom of mental disorders character-
cortex. The occipital lobe plays a role in processing visual ized by an inability to perceive reality. It can occur in many
information. conditions, including schizophrenia, mania, depression and
ORGANELLES Small structures within a cell that maintain the drug-induced states.
cells and do the cells’ work. RECEPTOR CELL A specialized sensory cell designed to pick up
PARASYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM A branch of the auto- and transmit sensory information.
nomic nervous system concerned with the conservation of the RECEPTOR MOLECULE A specific protein on the surface or
body’s energy and resources during relaxed states. inside of a cell with a characteristic chemical and physical
PARIETAL LOBE One of the four subdivisions of the cerebral structure. Many neurotransmitters and hormones exert their
cortex. The parietal lobe plays a role in sensory processes, e∑ects by binding to receptors on cells.
attention and language. REUPTAKE A process by which released neurotransmitters are
PARKINSON’S DISEASE A movement disorder caused by death absorbed for subsequent reuse.
of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra located in the ROD A sensory neuron located in the periphery of the retina.
midbrain. Symptoms include tremor, shuΩing gait and gen- The rod is sensitive to light of low intensity and specialized
eral paucity of movement. for nighttime vision.
PEPTIDES Chains of amino acids that can function as neuro- SCHIZOPHRENIA A chronic mental disorder characterized by
transmitters or hormones. psychosis (e.g., hallucinations and delusions), flattened emo-
PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM A division of the nervous sys- tions and impaired cognitive function.
tem consisting of all nerves that are not part of the brain or SECOND MESSENGERS Substances that trigger communi-
spinal cord. cations among di∑erent parts of a neuron. These chemicals
PHOSPHORYLATION A process that modifies the properties of play a role in the manufacture and release of neurotransmit-
neurons by acting on an ion channel, neurotransmitter receptor ters, intracellular movements, carbohydrate metabolism and
or other regulatory protein. During phosphorylation, a phos- processes of growth and development. The messengers direct
phate molecule is placed on a protein and results in the activa- e∑ects on the genetic material of cells may lead to long-term
tion or inactivation of the protein. Phosphorylation is believed alterations of behavior, such as memory and drug addiction.

51
SEROTONIN A monoamine neurotransmitter believed to play SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM A branch of the autonomic
many roles, including, but not limited to, temperature regula- nervous system responsible for mobilizing the body’s energy
tion, sensory perception and the onset of sleep. Neurons and resources during times of stress and arousal.
using serotonin as a transmitter are found in the brain and in SYNAPSE A gap between two neurons that functions as the
the gut. A number of antidepressant drugs are targeted to site of information transfer from one neuron to another.
brain serotonin systems. TEMPORAL LOBE One of the four major subdivisions of each
SHORT-TERM MEMORY A phase of memory in which a limited hemisphere of the cerebral cortex. The temporal lobe func-
amount of information may be held for several seconds to tions in auditory perception, speech and complex visual per-
minutes. ceptions.
STIMULUS An environmental event capable of being detected THALAMUS A structure consisting of two egg-shaped masses
by sensory receptors. of nerve tissue, each about the size of a walnut, deep within
STROKE The third largest cause of death in America, stroke the brain. The key relay station for sensory information
is an impeded blood supply to the brain. Stroke can be caused flowing into the brain, the thalamus filters out only informa-
by a rupture of a blood vessel wall, an obstruction of blood tion of particular importance from the mass of signals enter-
flow caused by a clot or other material or by pressure on a ing the brain.
blood vessel (as by a tumor). Deprived of oxygen, which is VENTRICLES Of the four ventricles, comparatively large spaces
carried by blood, nerve cells in the a∑ected area cannot func- filled with cerebrospinal fluid, three are located in the fore-
tion and die. Thus, the part of the body controlled by those brain and one in the brainstem. The lateral ventricles, the two
cells cannot function either. Stroke can result in loss of con- largest, are symmetrically placed above the brainstem, one in
sciousness and death. each hemisphere.
WERNICKE’S AREA A brain region responsible for the compre-
hension of language and the production of meaningful
speech.

52
Index
Numbers in bold refer to illustrations.

Acetylcholine 4 Down syndrome 40–41 Magnetoencephalography Pons 3, 23


Action potential 4 Drug reward system 34 (MEG) 44 Positron emission tomography
Addiction 33–36 Endocrine system 6–7, 25–27 Marijuana 36 (PET) 19, 43
Aging 28–29 Endorphins 6, 17 Memory 18–19 Primary visual cortex 12
and intellectual capacity 29 Epilepsy 31–32 Methylprednisolone 39 Procedural knowledge 18
AIDS 40 Epinephrine 25–26 Midbrain 3, 8 Prostaglandins 17, 31
Alcohol 34–36 Estrogen 7 Mitochondria 45 Psychostimulants 34–35
Alpha motor neurons 20 Fetal alcohol syndrome 35 Monoamine oxidase inhibitors Receptive field 12
Alzheimer’s disease 36–37 Firing of neurons 4–5 (MAOIs) 32 Receptors 4
Amino acid transmitters 4–5 Flexion withdrawal 20–21 Morphine 6, 30, 31, 34 Reflex 20–21
Amphetamines 34 Fluoxetine 32 Motor cortex 3, 20 Regeneration 46
Amyloid protein 36–37 Forebrain 3 Motor neuron 20 Reproduction 7
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis Functional Magnetic Reso- Motor unit 20 Schizophrenia 39–40
(ALS) 42 nance Imaging (fMRI) 44 Movement 20–21 Second messengers 7
Analgesia 30 Gamma-amino butyric acid MPTP 30 Selye, Hans 25
Androgen 7 (GABA) 5, 24, 32, 35 Multiple sclerosis 40 Serotonin 6, 32
Anxiety disorders 39 Gamma motor neurons 20 Myasthenia gravis 4 Single photon emission
Autoimmune response 27 Gene 45 Myelin 4–5 computed tomography
Autonomic nervous system diagnosis 44– 45 Narcolepsy 24 (SPECT) 43
11, 25 therapy 46–47 Nerve growth factor (NGF) 46 Sleep 22–24
Axon 4 –5 Glucocorticoids 7, 26–27 Nerve impulse 4, 5 REM sleep 22–24
Basal ganglia 19, 21, 30 Glutamate 5, 36, 38 Neurofibrillary tangles 36 stages 22
Biological clock 7, 27 Hearing 14–15 Neurological trauma 38–39 disorders 23–24
Brain Heroin 34 Neuron 4–5 Smell 15–16
aging 28–29 Hippocampus 3, 18–19, 27 birth 9–10 Spinal cord 6, 11, 17, 20–21,
anatomical organization 3 Huntington’s disease 41 migration 9–10 38–39, 46
development 8–11 Hypothalamus 3, 7, 24, 32 pathfinding 10 Strabismus 14
diseases 2–3 Immune system 27 survival 10–11 Stress 25–27
tumors 42 Information processing, Neurotransmitters 4 –7 in arousal 25–26
Broca’s area 19 and hearing 14–15 Nicotine 33–34 chronic 27
Catecholamines 6 and learning and memory NMDA receptors 5, 18 and endocrine system 25–27
Central nervous system 6, 11 18–19 Norepinephrine 6 and schizophrenia 39
Cerebellum 19, 21 and movement 20–21 Obsessive-compulsive Stroke 37–38
Cerebral cortex and pain 16–17 disorder 39 Substance P 6
3, 17, 19, 23, 31 and taste and smell 15–16 Occipital lobe 3, 12 Synapse 4, 5, 29
Club drugs 36 and vision 12–13 Olfactory bulbs 15–16 Taste 15–16
Cocaine 34–35 Inhibitory neurons 20–21 Opiates 34–35 Temporal lobe 3, 18
Cortisol 25–26 Ion channels 4 Pain 16–17, 30–31 Testosterone 7
Costs of brain diseases 2–3 Language 19 Panic disorder 39 Thalamus 3
Crossed extension reflex 20–21 Learning 18–19 Parietal lobe 3 Touch 16–17
Declarative knowledge 18 Learning disorders 37 Parkinson’s disease 30, Tourette syndrome 41– 42
Dementia 28, 36 Levodopa 6, 30 46–47 Tricyclic antidepressants 32
Dendrite 4–5 Limbic system 15 Peptides 6 Trophic factors 6, 46
Depression Long-term potentiation 18 Peripheral nervous system 11 Vision 12, 13 –15
major 32 Lou Gehrig’s disease 42 Phenytoin 31 Wernicke’s area 19
manic 32 Magnetic resonance imaging Phobias 39 Working memory 18
Dopamine 6, 30, 34 (MRI) 43– 44 Pituitary gland 6, 7, 32

53
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