首页> 外文期刊>Behavioural Brain Research: An International Journal >Stereotypies in caged parrots, schizophrenia and autism: evidence for a common mechanism.
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Stereotypies in caged parrots, schizophrenia and autism: evidence for a common mechanism.

机译:关在笼子里的鹦鹉,精神分裂症和自闭症的刻板印象:共同机制的证据。

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Spontaneously occurring abnormal behaviors in animals have recently received considerable attention, both in veterinary medicine and as a potential model for abnormal behavior in several human mental disorders. Stereotypies are abnormal repetitive, unvarying, and functionless behaviors that are often performed by captive and domesticated animals housed in barren environments. They closely resemble the stereotypies of autistic and mentally retarded patients, stereotypies of unmedicated chronic schizophrenic patients, certain classes of simple tic in Tourette's syndrome, and several drug-induced behaviors. However, evidence for a common mechanism has been lacking. Stereotypies in human mental disorders are indicative of profound brain dysfunction involving the basal ganglia, and are associated with pervasive voluntary-motor impairments and psychological distress. Here we show that stereotypy in captive Orange-Wing Amazon Parrots (Amazona amazonica) is correlated with poor performance on the same psychiatric task (the 'gambling task') as stereotypy in autistic and schizophrenic patients. The task measures recurrent perseveration-the tendency to inappropriately repeat responses. Thus, the more stereotypy a parrot performed, the more likely it was to inappropriately repeat itself from trial-to-trial on the task; and the more rapidly it made repeated, but not switched, responses. These results parallel the executive motor impairments seen in human patients, and therefore suggest that, like in human patients, stereotypy in caged parrots reflects a general disinhibition of the behavioral control mechanisms of the dorsal basal ganglia. If this result holds true in other laboratory species, stereotypic animals are likely to be of questionable utility in behavior, neuroscience, and neuropharmacological experiments. In humans, stereotypies and obsessive-compulsive behaviors are considered to be mutually exclusive categories of behavior, with different neural substrates, and different treatment strategies. These results, therefore, suggest that the pharmacological treatment of stereotypies in veterinary medicine based on the assumption that they are equivalent to human Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder may be inappropriate. As stereotypies in captive animals develop in response to the captive environment, these results also emphasize the role that the environment may play in eliciting or exacerbating stereotypy in human patients. Finally, by parallel to human patients, there is a potential psychological distress in animals showing these behaviors.
机译:最近在动物医学中,自发发生的异常行为受到了广泛的关注,无论是在兽医学中还是在几种人类精神疾病中作为异常行为的潜在模型。刻板印象是重复的,不变的和无功能的行为,通常是由生活在贫瘠环境中的圈养和驯养的动物执行的。它们与自闭症和智障患者的刻板印象,未接受药物治疗的慢性精神分裂症患者的刻板印象,图雷特综合症的某些简单抽动症以及几种药物引起的行为非常相似。但是,缺乏通用机制的证据。人类精神障碍中的刻板印象预示着涉及基底神经节的严重脑功能障碍,并伴有普遍的自发性运动障碍和心理困扰。在这里,我们表明,与自闭症和精神分裂症患者的定型观念相同的精神病任务(“赌博任务”)在圈养的橙翅亚马逊鹦鹉(Amazona amazonica)中的定型观念与不良表现相关。该任务衡量反复出现的坚持不懈-不适当重复回答的趋势。因此,鹦鹉执行的定型观念越多,就越有可能不恰当地重复执行这项任务。并以更快的速度做出了重复但没有切换的响应。这些结果与在人类患者中看到的执行性运动障碍相似,因此表明,与人类患者一样,笼养鹦鹉中的定型观念反映了对背基底神经节的行为控制机制的普遍抑制。如果该结果在其他实验室物种中成立,则定型动物可能在行为,神经科学和神经药理学实验中具有可疑的实用性。在人类中,刻板印象和强迫行为被认为是相互排斥的行为类别,具有不同的神经底物和不同的治疗策略。因此,这些结果表明,基于对定型观念等同于人类强迫症的假设,对兽医中的定型观念进行药物治疗可能是不合适的。随着圈养动物的定型观念响应圈养环境而发展,这些结果也强调了环境在诱发或加剧人类患者定型观念中的作用。最后,与人类患者平行的是,显示这些行为的动物存在潜在的心理困扰。

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