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Neural Circuits as Substrates of Mental Illness and Targets for Therapeutics
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by Amit Etkin, MD, PhD - Over the past two decades, neuroimaging studies have defined a set of distributed brain systems that contribute to cognition, emotion, mood, and other mental processes. Perturbations in these circuits have been identified in different ways across psychiatric disorders. The challenge ahead of us is how to use these insights to: 1) understand the nature of neural circuit deficits in mental illnesses and their relevance for existing treatments, and 2) develop novel circuit-based therapeutics.
In this webinar, Dr. Etkin will discuss work in the lab defining the neural circuit abnormalities associated with psychiatric disorders as a whole, as well as specific abnormalities associated with particular mood and anxiety disorders, as well as subgroups within them. Dr. Etkin will then examine the mechanisms of current medications, psychotherapy, and brain stimulation treatments within the context of a circuit-based understanding of these psychiatric disorders.
Finally, Dr. Etkin will describe new methods for direct and non-invasive probing and manipulation of circuits, plus insights that these bring for the development of new circuit-targeting therapeutics. Together, these data suggest that we are now on the brink of innovations in "rational" circuit-based diagnosis and treatments for mental illness. Success down this path will take us beyond the use of symptom checklists for diagnosis and the one-size-fits all approach to treatment with the psychopharmacological and psychotherapeutic tools currently available.
In this webinar, Dr. Etkin will discuss work in the lab defining the neural circuit abnormalities associated with psychiatric disorders as a whole, as well as specific abnormalities associated with particular mood and anxiety disorders, as well as subgroups within them. Dr. Etkin will then examine the mechanisms of current medications, psychotherapy, and brain stimulation treatments within the context of a circuit-based understanding of these psychiatric disorders.
Finally, Dr. Etkin will describe new methods for direct and non-invasive probing and manipulation of circuits, plus insights that these bring for the development of new circuit-targeting therapeutics. Together, these data suggest that we are now on the brink of innovations in "rational" circuit-based diagnosis and treatments for mental illness. Success down this path will take us beyond the use of symptom checklists for diagnosis and the one-size-fits all approach to treatment with the psychopharmacological and psychotherapeutic tools currently available.