1Unit of PharmacoTherapy, -Epidemiology & -Economics,Department of Pharmacy,Groningen Research Institute of Pharmacy,University of Groningen,Groningen,The Netherlands.
3Mental Health Research Institute,Tomsk National Research Medical Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences,Tomsk,Russian Federation.
Acta Neuropsychiatr. 2018 Feb;30(1):29-42. doi: 10.1017/neu.2017.8. Epub 2017 May 5.
Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a biological framework for the subcortical regulation of human emotional behaviour which may offer an explanation for the pathogenesis of the principle symptoms of mental disorders. Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behaviour are essential for all free-moving animals to stay alive and to have offspring. Even the oldest ocean-dwelling animal creatures, living about 560 million years ago and human ancestors, must therefore have been capable of generating these behaviours. Our earliest vertebrate ancestors, with a brain comparable with the modern lamprey, had a sophisticated extrapyramidal system generating and controlling all motions as well as a circuit including the habenula for the evaluation of the benefits of their actions. Almost the complete endbrain of the first land animals with a brain comparable with that of amphibians became assimilated into the human amygdaloid and hippocampal complex, whereas only a small part of the dorsal pallium and striatum developed into the ventral extrapyramidal circuits and the later insular cortex. The entire neocortex covering the hemispheres is of recent evolutionary origin, appearing first in early mammals. During the entire evolution of vertebrates, the habenular system was well conserved and maintained its function in regulating the intensity of reward-seeking (pleasure-related) and misery-fleeing (happiness-related) behaviour. The authors propose that the same is true in humans. Symptomatology of human mental disorders can be considered to result from maladaptation within a similar amygdalo/hippocampal-habenular-mesencephalic-ventral striatal system.
以大脑前脑的进化发展为起点,作者为皮质下(subcortical)调节人类情绪行为开发了一个生物学框架,该框架可能为精神障碍主要症状的发病机制提供了解释。寻求奖赏(寻求奖励)和逃避痛苦(逃避痛苦)的行为对所有自由移动的动物来说都是必不可少的,以保持生命和繁衍后代。即使是生活在约 5.6 亿年前的最古老的海洋生物和人类祖先,也必须能够产生这些行为。我们最早的脊椎动物祖先,其大脑与现代七鳃鳗相当,拥有一个复杂的锥体外系系统,能够产生和控制所有运动,以及一个包括缰核在内的回路,用于评估其行为的益处。第一批具有与两栖动物相当的大脑的陆地动物的端脑几乎全部被同化到人类的杏仁核和海马体复合体中,而只有背侧大脑皮层和纹状体的一小部分发育成腹侧锥体外系回路和后来的岛叶皮质。覆盖半球的整个新皮质是最近进化而来的,最早出现在早期的哺乳动物中。在脊椎动物的整个进化过程中,缰核系统得到了很好的保护,并保持了其调节奖赏寻求(与快乐相关)和痛苦逃避(与幸福相关)行为强度的功能。作者提出,人类也是如此。人类精神障碍的症状可以被认为是类似杏仁核/海马体-缰核-中脑-腹侧纹状体系统内的适应不良的结果。