T. Ryan O'Leary
PsyDactic
A resource for psychiatrists and other medical or behavioral health professionals interested in exploring the neuroscientific basis of psychiatric disorders, psychopharmacology, neuromodulation, and other psychiatric interventions, as well as discussions of pseudoscience, Bayesian reasoning, ethics, the history of psychiatry, and human psychology in general. This podcast is not medical advice. It strives to be science communication. Dr. O'Leary is a skeptical thinker who often questions what we think we know. He hopes to open more conversations about what we don't know we don't know. Find t...
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Autor
T. Ryan O'Leary
Kategoria
Strona podcastu
Ostatni odcinek
17 cze 2026
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Odcinki
In a Word - Aphasia 09.06.2024 37:22
In this episode, Dr. O'Leary discusses a word that he has struggled to understand since medical school. The word is aphasia. The root “phasia” comes from the Greek phanai which means “to speak.” When aphasia is used medically, it refers to an inability to speak, although not always. More generally it is often used to mean a failure to understand or produce language, but it gets complicate...
WTF Cerebellum - Little Brain, Big Deal 04.05.2024 32:58
I did not until recently even consider the cerebellum when thinking about psychiatric conditions, but the more I read, the more I wonder why the cerebellum is not considered a potential important player in nearly every psychiatric disorder. Although it can be said that all brain regions primarily function to make predictions, the cerebellum is especially active at refining impromptu predictions t...
WTF - Thalamus 24.04.2024 22:32
The thalami are bilaterally symmetrical structures in the subcortical part of the brain that are cradled by the basal ganglia. They are major hubs of pretty much everything your brain does and all of the sensory information coming into the brain with the exception of smell. More primitive models of the brain visualized it as a bunch of relatively isolated modules, each specialized to perform a si...
Seroquel (Quetiapine) - Drugs, Sex, Money and Psychopharm 12.04.2024 24:53
In this episode, I discuss a medication that patients who saw a psychiatrist or their primary care provider between about 1997 and 2015 were very likely to find themselves prescribed. More recently, it has been taken down a notch or two on prescribers lists of preferred meds. This medication is quetiapine, marketed as Seroquel by AstraZeneca in the US. Whether you were diagnosed with schizophre...
In a Word - Confabulation 20.03.2024 14:22
This episode continues an intermittent series called “In a Word.” Past episodes have explored words like Akathisia, Dissociation, Perseveration, and even the difference between Impulsive and Compulsive. This episode explores Confabulation, including some of the brain circuits involved, and what might differentiate confabulation from other kinds of false or implanted memories or delusions. Please...
How guilty are adolescents for their crimes? 03.03.2024 29:31
In 2012 the Supreme Court heard two related cases involving adolescents convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole because of mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines in their states. One of the boys, Evan Miller along with an accomplice, had beat a man unconscious with a baseball bat after a fight that ensued when the man awoke to find Miller robbing him. Miller and his f...
Serious Mental Illness in America with Dr. Zac Brooks 16.02.2024 45:59
I am lucky today to be able to bring you an interview with Dr. Zac Brooks who is passionate about serious mental illness (SMI). “What is serious mental illness?” you might ask. That is one of the things we are going to discuss, and you may be surprised when Dr. Brooks explains how it was first formally defined. We also discuss the numerous ways the US has tried to reform how SMI is treated with...
HIV, PrEP, and Mental Health with Dr. Jon Lindefjeld 09.02.2024 46:48
PsyDactic welcomes Dr. Jon Lindefjeld for a discussion of the history of HIV and AIDS. In particular, we discuss the development of effective antiretroviral therapies, including pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), highlighting the CDC guidelines for use and monitoring, need to treat psychiatric com-morbidities, and the importance of monitoring adherence and drug i...
Perspectives on the Borderline: The Most Disordered Personality 02.02.2024 40:07
Dr. O'Leary discusses some of the history of the borderline personality, how different perspectives have attempted to explain its origin, how to treat it and how not to treat it. He starts in 1947 with some colorful descriptions of patients living with borderline personality disorder that would never get published today, and highlights some of the ways in which we have made progress (or not...
The Ghost of Personality Disorders Future 26.01.2024 23:27
Our current diagnostic criteria for personality disorders have failed to demonstrate validity or reliability. The DSM 5 encouraged psychiatrists to start considering a broad range of personality features adapted from the Five Factor Model. These are combined with global functioning measures to build a personality inventory for any patient who is having dysfunction related to their personality. P...
Tattoos, Stigma, Racists, and Psychiatry 22.01.2024 26:11
Humans have a history of tattooing that stretches millennia into prehistory. The western ban on tattoos by the early church resulted in a systematic effort to paint tattooed individuals as pagan, primitive, vulgar, criminal, and mentally ill. Psychiatrists have historically contributed to this characterization but are in a position to help reframe how citizens and policymakers view tattooed indi...
Attractor Networks and the Bayesian Brain 16.01.2024 58:06
The brain understands the world by building models that predict the future. One of the ways that it does this is by utilizing attractor networks. These small world networks are constantly trying to determine what is a true signal from the constant noise in the neural net. Dr. O'Leary explores how attractor networks have been hypothesized to explain psychosis, depression, and obsessive comp...
Serotonin - Jack of All Trades, Master of None 31.12.2023 32:44
When I started to make this episode, I thought I would try to do a comprehensive review of all of the various functions of serotonin across its 15 or more receptor types, but I soon found myself overwhelmed. More importantly, I found that some stories are more interesting to tell than others, so here I discuss serotonin and focus on how a few 5-HT receptors can not only help us survive, but also...
Antipsychotics and their discontents 15.12.2023 21:31
Frequently I have complained that the terms "typical and atypical" or "first generation and second generation" antipsychotics were not very helpful. When I give chalk talks to junior residents and interns about antipsychotics, this is one of the first things that I note. It is the medicines relative affinities for different receptors that appear to make the difference, not wh...
Extrapyramidal Side Effects and Tardive Dyskinesia for Super Nerds 14.12.2023 37:22
This episode explores side effects of antipsychotics at the molecular level. It starts by exploring receptors and their ligands and takes a turn into the dorsal striatum where dopamine, acetylcholine, serotonin, and glutamate work together to help us dance the mamba. Dr. O'Leary explores what happens when the complex pathways of the cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical tract are disrupted by a...
The STAR*D Trial: Scientifically Flawed or Scientific Fraud? 11.12.2023 22:02
The authors of the famous sequenced treatment alternatives to relieve depression trial or STAR*D reported that about two-thirds or 67% of patients had achieved remission after 4 trials of antidepressant medication. This remission rate has been questioned over the years and in October of 2023, the journal BMJ Open published an article that reports to have reanalyzed the date from STAR*D using the...
Dopamine Networks and Psychosis 03.12.2023 32:17
This episode is about dopamine. In episode 32, I discussed the pseudoscientific trend of the “dopamine detox” or "dopamine fasting." Instead of talking about pseudoscience in this episode, I discuss the actual science surrounding dopamine and its relationship with the neuroleptics or antipsychotics as they are more commonly known. The effects and side effects of antipsychotics are r...
In a Word - Impulsive vs Compulsive 11.11.2023 29:00
In this Episode, I continue an intermittent series called “In A Word.” The difference between prior episodes and this one is that today I have two words. I chose these words because I don’t really know the difference between them, and even after reading and trying to understand the difference, I am not sure that there is a clear difference. The two words are Impulsive and Compulsive . Please l...
Traumatic Brain Injury - How Severe Was It? 18.10.2023 24:34
I discuss something that is likely to present itself to a physician long after the fact: a single mild brain injury. This episode focuses on how to classify the severity of a single brain injury. While working in a brain injury unit, I noticed that some providers used the term severe brain injury when referring patients to neurology or neuropsychiatry, and this communicates something very spe...
The Medial Prefrontal Cortex 07.08.2023 15:28
This episode continues a series on the prefrontal cortex, a complex region of the brain that gives us the ability to have the kinds of thoughts no other species on earth is known to have. The medial (or mesial) prefrontal cortex is especially important for emotional and autonomic regulation, attention and goal-directed behaviors (including addiction), and building our sense of self (that is our...
The Orbitofrontal Cortex - Our built-in Economist 18.07.2023 25:30
In this episode, I am sliding down and under the front part of the brain and consider the orbital frontal cortex, that part of the brain right above and a little behind your eyes. It is much smaller than the lateral gyri on the prefrontal cortex, but appears to be an important probability generator in our brain when we need to consider different options that can result in different rewards or in...
The Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex - Our Executor and Speech Writer 17.07.2023 36:15
W e seem to understand the specializations of the the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex on the left better than the right side of our brain. That is because most of us do a lot more language processing on the left or dominant side. The more inferior and caudal parts of the dorsolateral PFC on the left side are more specialized for speech. The more superior parts are more involved in working memory...
The Prefrontal Cortex - An Introduction to What Makes Us Human 14.07.2023 20:09
Besides being relatively hairless apes, there are some things about humans that make us special among animals. In the past we have noted things like, “We have big brains and we use tools,” or “We contemplate the future and our own mortality,” or “We use a truly complex language both verbal and written to communicate complex ideas.” These are things we have and do, but what is it about our brains...
Psychological versus Neuropsychological Testing 12.07.2023 40:23
This episode is about how to decide whether to send a patient to get neuropsychological or just psychological testing, and this decision is determined by at least two things. The first is the question that you are trying to answer. The second is, what can the service that I am referring to provide for the patient? In this episode, I will focus primarily on the first consideration: the questi...
In a Word - Validity 11.07.2023 25:50
Today I discuss the term “validity.” Let’s say we wanted to develop a test that identifies pathological character traits or quantifies depression symptom burden on a patient. A good test is going to do more than simply list the diagnostic criteria for various diagnoses and then ask the patient if they think that sounds like them. A test needs to have a few things. First it needs to have a defi...
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