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Neuropsychiatry
module introduction
John O’Donovan
Consultant Old Age Psychiatrist
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Neuropsychiatry

Difficult to define

Is it the neurology of psychiatry?

Is it the psychiatry of neurology?

Is it something else?
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Good and Bad
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Who do you believe?
Kraepelin
Freud

Academic observation

Far more charismatic

Believe that illnesses had a
biological substrate

Better writer

Psychoanalysis

Descendants dominated USA
psychiatry

In 2012 what is his relevance?



Psychopathology
Worked with Alzheimer and
Erb
Dominates ICD-10 and DSM 4
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Sigmund

Prodigious intellect, a genius

Fluent in seven languages

Reading Shakespeare in English at 7 years of age

Huge personal charm and charisma

Inspirational leader, look at his followers

Provided great insights or alternatively untestable
hypotheses. What are the alternatives to his view about
underlying psychological processes?
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Why does this matter?

Defines psychiatry

Also and more interestingly it allows psychiatrists to some
extent define themselves

Neuropsychiatrists tend to be neo Kraepelin but the paradox
is that neurologists want them to be Freudian

Very few of us are truly a “tabula rasa”
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Psychiatry of neurology

Stroke

Brain injury

Epilepsy

White matter disorders

Dementia

Movement disorders

Metabolic disorders etc

Lesion based, pathology based approach
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This is the central organ
Brain as driver of mind
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Neurology of psychiatry

Schizophrenia

Mood disorders

Neurodevelopmental hypothesis

Subtle alterations in brain
+ Functional imaging in
schizophrenia
Neuropathological but more subtle
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What about the neurologists?
+ One of Charcot’s hysterical
patients
These patients are still around.
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Pathology versus non pathology

Both neurology of psychiatry
and psychiatry of neurology
believe in the concept of a
neuropathology and adopt a
medical model.

Both are neo Kraepelin.

Psychiatry of hysteria, non
epileptic attack disorder,
medically unexplained
symptoms etc, all have a far
more dynamic and Freudian
influenced model.

Intrinsically part of
neuropsychiatry.
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The CT1 perspective

This module

Four days in total

My simple priority for you
MRCPsych
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Paper one breakdown

Basic Psychopharmacology
14
8

History and Mental State
12

Human Psychological Development

Descriptive Psychopathology
24

Social Psychology

Cognitive Assessment 10

Basic Psychological Processes
14

Neurological Examination

Dynamic Psychopathology
12

Assessment

Basic Psychological Treatments
8

Description and Measurement

History of Psychiatry

Diagnosis 12

Basic Ethics and Philosophy of Psychiatry
8

Classification

Stigma and Culture
10
16
6
4
8
8

Aetiology 12

Prevention of Psychological Disorder
6
8
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Common question themes

The questions come from a single common data bank.

The same themes have been going around and around for
the last thirty years.

The fundamental for CT1 trainees should in my view be the
first part of the MRCPsych.

Basic clinical neurology and psychopathology will make up
about 35% of those questions.
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Broad outline

Day one

Epilepsy and psychiatry of epilepsy.

Brief introduction to neuropsychiatry.

MCQs

Clinical neuroanatomy and common neurological questions
for the MRCPsych
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MCQs 1-6

The following are causes of absent knee jerks and extensor
plantars.
 Motor
neuron disease
 Friedreich’s
 Pernicious
ataxia
anaemia
 Complications
A
of diabetes
neurofibroma of the conus medullaris
 Brown-Sequard
syndrome at L2 level
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MCQs 7-12

The following are true about the pupillary response

A lesion of the retina may impair the response.

Part of the reflex arc takes place in the pons.

They are consensual

A lesion of the abduces nerve may impair the response.

Degeneration of the ciliary ganglion may produce a tonic
pupil

it is possible to be blind wit a normal pupillary response.
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MCQs 13-20

In Broca’s aphasia

Receptive speech is unimpaired

The lesion is on the contralateral side of the hand dominance of the patient.

Repetition is intact.

Reading is intact.

word production per minute is 4-6

Secondary to stroke, the artery involved commonly originates from the
vertebrobasilar system.

The patient may be frustrated by being inarticulate

There is an odd connection to Hawiian tropic factor 50 (for pale Irish skin)
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MCQs 21-25

In Wernicke’s encephalopathy

There is a classical triad

Diplopia is invariable

Oral B vitamins are sufficient if given in large doses

Gait is broad based but tandem walking is unimpaired

Red cell transketolase activity may be used effectively as a
diagnostic test
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MCQs 26-30

In syringomyelia with associated Arnold Chiari Malformation
the following may be present

Severe positional headaches.

Sensory loss in a cape distribution

Rotatory nystagmus

Cerebellar type dysarthria

Cognitive impairment
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Now score them up

To pass probably require a score of 20-30.

Questions are a bit odd and slimey but that’s the way of the
game.

Now lunch and reconvene at 1.30 for 2 hours of clinical
neuroanatomy.