IMR Press / FBL / Volume 16 / Issue 7 / DOI: 10.2741/3881

Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark (FBL) is published by IMR Press from Volume 26 Issue 5 (2021). Previous articles were published by another publisher on a subscription basis, and they are hosted by IMR Press on imrpress.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with Frontiers in Bioscience.

Article
Neuroglialpharmacology: white matter pathophysiologies and psychiatric treatments
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1 Department of Psychiatry, The David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
2 Laboratory of Neuroimaging, Department of Neurology, Division of Brain Mapping, The David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
3 The Brain Research Institute, The David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
4 Greater Los Angeles VA Healthcare System, West Los Angeles, CA 90073, USA
Front. Biosci. (Landmark Ed) 2011, 16(7), 2695–2733; https://doi.org/10.2741/3881
Published: 1 June 2011
Abstract

Psychotropic treatments such as second generation or "atypical" antipsychotics are efficacious in a wide spectrum of psychiatric disorders ranging from schizophrenia to depression, bipolar disorder, and autism. These treatments are associated with peripheral metabolic derangements that are often also present in drug-naive patients. Furthermore, altering lipid composition/levels (with omega 3 fatty acids) and ameliorating oxidative toxicities may treat/prevent disease. The above observations are reexamined from the perspective of a myelin-centered model of the human brain. The model proposes that the human brain's extensive myelination required higher metabolic resources that caused evolutionary adaptations resulting in our quadratic (inverted U) myelination trajectory that peaks in the sixth decade of life. It further proposes that optimal brain function depends on exquisite action potential synchronization that myelin makes possible and that myelin's exceptional vulnerability to subtle metabolic/oxidative abnormalities may promote both developmental and degenerative diseases. Available data are integrated herein to suggest that widely used psychotropic treatments have under-appreciated CNS metabolic and neurotransmitter effects on myelination, its plasticity, and repair that may substantially contribute to their mechanisms of action.

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