what is major depressive episode diagnosed using
DSM-5
what is a depressive episode diagnosed using
ICD-10
what is a major depressive episode
5 or more of the symptoms present during same 2 week period and represent a change from normal
- either anhedonia or depressed mood must be present
- cause either significant distress or impairment of functioning
- not part of bipolar disorder
- not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance
- not better accounted for by bereavement
- prominent negative cognitions
- when severe can involve psychosis, loss of colour vision, catatonic retardation and suicide
what are monoamines divided into
catecholamines - dopamine and noradrenaline
indoleamines - serotonin
what do monoamines function as
both hormones and neurotransmitters
catecholamine features
when produced by the adrenal gland, they function as circulating hormones and the great majority of adrenaline is synthesised there
- 90% of the serotonin in the body is found in the enteric chromaffin cells In the GI tract and regulates spinal movement
- however, when in the CNS, they act as neurotransmitter and there are significant quantities of dopamine and noradrenaline and serotonin synthesised as neurotransmitters in the. rain
what is the noradrenaline system
what is the serotonin system
what is the release, re uptake and degradation of these systems
serotonin re uptake and degradation molecules
noradrenaline transporter and degradation molecules
how are molecules of serotonin transported
have been transported in vehicles from the cell bodies and are now at the terminal, where the vesicles fuse with the terminal membrane and the serotonin is released into the synaptic cleft. in the cleft it acts as a neurotransmitter by acting at a range of pre and post synaptic receptors. the process is identical for noradrenaline
how is the serotonin signal terminate
re uptake which is the main method
enzymatic degradation
what happens in serotonin reuptake
serotonin molecules are taken back up into the terminal via the serotonin re uptake transporter.
what happens in serotonin degradation
serotonin molecules which evade reuptake are broken down by the enzyme MAO-A to metabolites
what is the pattern for noradrenaline
it either undergoes re uptake via the noradrenaline re uptake transporter or NAT or it under goes enzymatic degradation. but in the case of noradrenaline there are two main enzymes: MAO-A and COMT
where are concentrations of these enzymes the highest
in the terminal than in the synapse, so that when the neurotransmitters are taken back into the terminal, the majority undergoes enzymatic degradation there too, by MAO-A in the case of serotonin and both MAO-A and COMT in the case of noradrenaline.
5-HT and NA enzymatic degradation diagram
what happens to noradrenaline that survives re uptake or enzymatic degradation
it is free to act at a range of receptors
what is the noradrenaline receptor most relevant to depression
the alpha 2 receptor
one. of the results is the inhibition of transmitters release and is significant for depression medication
what are all of the serotonin receptors except the 5-HT3 receptor
are all G coupled receptors except the 5-HT3 receptor is a fast cation channel - cation gating
what is the action of serotonin at all receptor except for the 5-HT1, 5-HT5
stimulate neuronal firing
the other two are negatively coupled to their secondary receptor to therefore causes inhibition of neural finding
what does NA stimulation at alpha 2 auto and heteroreceptors on NA and 5-HT neurones cause
decrease cell firing
what does NA stimulation at alpha 1 adreno-receptors on 5-HT cell body tends to do what
increase 5-HT cell firing