Anno XVI - No. 09 - 2000

 

 

 

 

Paolo Pancheri

CURRICULUM ABSTRACT

REFERENCES

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Today psychopharmacology has made it possible to cure many psychiatric complaints, very often completely, and this currently represents the fastest growing pharmacological sector. Psychiatric diagnostics, using increasingly more sophisticated empirical and statistical methods, has managed to paint a very precise syndromic picture indeed of psychiatric complaints and is close to the final goal of diagnostics based on aetiopathogenic criteria. Finally, the exponential growth of neuro-sciences has led to a growing knowledge of the pathophysiological brain mechanisms behind psychiatric complaints. In the light of new discoveries and new treatment methods, the way of considering psychiatric complaints has changed completely in just a few years.

The old mental homes have been shut once and for all. New and more agile hospital structures have sprung up which have helped see "mental illnesses" in a new light, more similar to other illnesses. The diagnosis and cure of psychiatric complaints have become an increasingly bigger priority in terms of state and private investments in the field of medicine.

Today, psychiatry has greatly extended its areas of competence following a growing awareness that emotional complaints, anxiety and an addiction to substances result in high morbidity and are among the major causes of temporary or permanent invalidity among all world populations (1,2). The greater knowledge of operating possibilities in the psychiatry field at both diagnostic and therapeutic level has resulted in a growing number of people who suffered from psychiatric complaints (and did not realise this) turning to psychiatrists in order to alleviate their suffering. The development of neuro-sciences has made psychiatric complaints more explainable or understandable.

The language of psychiatrists, in terms of aetiology, pathogenesis, symptomatology and therapy is now the same as that used in all the fields of medicine and above all "psychic suffering" is no longer grounds for marginalisation and social rejection. This increase in knowledge has, on the other hand, also deeply changed the conceptual models of psychiatry. The dominant model until just a few years ago had its roots in the historical dichotomy of "mind" and "brain", "organic" and "non-organic", "biological and "psychic", "neurology" and "psychiatry". Within the field of competence of neurology came demonstrated brain damage with possible psychic consequences.

Within the field of competence of psychiatry came emotional, cognitive and behavioural changes, where no structural alteration of the brain could be demonstrated. Molecular biology and brain display have profoundly changed this model. Molecular biology techniques applied to brain functions have shown how events, emotions, memories and thoughts can change both neurone structure and function through a chain of post-synaptic biochemical events that link the neurone environment with genic transcription mechanisms (FIG. 1). In turn, molecular changes can radically condition emotions, behaviours and cognitive processes.

Drugs and psychoactive substances, emotional stressors, events in life, personal interactions, intrapsychic events interact at neuronal DNA transcription level (neuronal plasticity) affecting the metabolism of the neurotransmitters, the sensitivity and density of the ceptors, the number and arborization of the synapse, and intraneuronal proteine synthesis procedures (3-6). The brain display techniques (PET, SPECT, and fRMN) have also highlighted how emotional states extended over time can functionally trigger a series of related brain areas and how the extended or repeated triggering over time of specific brain structures causes changes to the biochemical environment in those areas. Changes in the biochemical environment, in turn, trigger a chain of post-synaptic events that cause persistent changes in nuclear genic transcription.

This way, events usually considered of "psychological" type actually change the molecular structure of the brain, which in turn becomes the cause of the persistence of the emotions caused by the events. In this new context, the borderline between "organic" and "psychic" obviously loses its original meaning and one enters a new dimension, where structure, function and intrapsychic events appear as different aspects of an identical brain continuum. This conceptual revolution has also been based on the extrapolation of the way the brain works from notions obtained from information technology applications.

The concepts of "hardware" and "software", immediately understandable for any PC operator, have, when applied to brain functions, shown how psychiatric complaints can be caused either by "hardware faults" (structure) and "software faults" (information management programs). The difference between our data processing tools and the brain is that software alterations (management programs) can, in the brain, affect the structure, while obviously this is not the case as regards our daily "artificial intelligence" tools.

A new discipline has thus seen the light over recent years within psychiatry which has taken the name of "molecular psychiatry". Molecular psychiatry studies are currently centred on identifying molecular substrates (for instance, individual genes and proteins) through which various types of genetic and environmental factors associate to produce alterations in the processing procedures of the information that could be at the bottom of specific psychopathologic situations. Molecular psychiatry thus covers a broad spectrum of knowledge relating to the interaction between external environment, management programs and molecular changes at neurone level. Neurotransmission, neuronal plasticity, relationship between environmental factors, genic transmission and finally molecular genetics are the main subject of this area of research (TAB. I)

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Paolo Pancheri