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Background. Schizophrenia is a mental disease that includes disruptions in cognition, perception, emotional receptivity, and social synergy. Neuroplasticity is a process
with adaptive changes in the brain. It is the ability of the
nervous system to reorganize its structure, functions in reply to different stimuli. Objective of the study. The objective of the study is to analyze recent material about the functional and structural changes that happen in patients’ brains
with schizophrenia. Material and methods. The analysis
of the latest information that shows the relation between
neuroplasticity processes and the mental disorder such as
schizophrenia published on reliable sources such as NIH,
PubMed, World Health Organization, Scientific Research,
The American Journal of Psychiatry and others. Results. In
a meta-analysis effectuated in the USA, two groups participated, the first is people with schizophrenia and the second
healthy individuals. Compared with the second group, the
first has a more widespread thinner cortex, surface area is
smaller, and frontal and temporal lobe regions are the largest effect sizes. In another study, also effectuated in the USA,
in magnetic resonance imaging studies of schizophrenia, the
most common findings were diminished gray matter volumes of the medial and superior temporal, prefrontal areas.
One of the most important findings in schizophrenia is a reduced level of the N-acetylaspartate in the prefrontal cortex,
thalamus, temporal cortex, cerebellum, basal ganglia. Conclusion. Numerous studies propose that schizophrenia may
be a neuroplasticity disorder. Countless mechanisms of neuroplasticity implicate molecules affiliated with glutamatergic neurotransmission. In schizophrenia numerous of these
molecules have also been found to be abnormal. |
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