neurotransmitters in health and disease— overview and update
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NEUROTRANSMITTERS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE— Overview and Update. Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNP CPP Associates Chicago IL www.barbbancroft.com. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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NEUROTRANSMITTERS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE—
Overview and Update
Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPCPP Associates
Chicago IL www.barbbancroft.com
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• In the mid-nineteenth century, advocates of physical causes for mental illness recommended bloodletting, purging, cold-water immersion, and various tonics and medications (primarily opium and opium derivatives) as treatment.
• Others believed that mental disorders were caused by inappropriate mothering; it was thought impossible for patients to recover while at home. Part of the treatment was to place the patients in a mental asylum. To simplify management, many of these patients were restrained in straight-jackets and manacles and chains.
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NEUROTRANSMITTERS• Indolamines Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, or 5-HT)—the most
ubiquitous neurotransmitter of all) Melatonin • Catecholamines (Sympathetic Nervous System) Dopamine (DA) Norepinephrine (NE) • Acetylcholine (Parasympathetic Nervous System) • GABA (Gamma-amino-butyric acid )(inhibitory)• Glutamate (excitatory)• Nicotine• Cannabinoids
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The supporting “cast”
• Neurotransmitters don’t work as a separate molecule…neurotransmitters need receptors, neurotransmitters need to be metabolized via various enzymes, neurotransmitters need to be “taken back-up” into cells in a timely fashion, the information needs to be transported via pathways…SO, we will be talking about all of the supporting “cast” so to speak…
• RECEPTORS, ENZYMES, GLIAL CELLS, PATHWAYS
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For example, serotonin receptors
• Serotonin receptors for example…known as 5-HT (hydroxytryptamine)—and there are
MANY of them…5-HT1 through 5HT7, with many subtypes…5-HT1A, 5-HT1B, 5-HT1D, 5-HT1E, 5-HT1F; 5-HT2A, 5-HT2B, 5-HT2C; 5-HT3; 5-HT4; 5HT-5A; 5-HT6; 5-HT7
• 5-HT1C does not exist, and the 5-HT5B only exists in mice
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Serotonin Receptors• Drugs that affect serotonin either boost the
receptors or block the receptors…agonists or antagonists
• 5-HT1A—if you activate it you will be anxious; if you block it you will reduce anxiety—Buspirone (Buspar) is a blocker of this receptor
• 5-HT2C—blocking this receptor results in increased food intake and weight gain; “atypical” antidepressants such as olanzapine (Zyprexa), clozapine (Clozaril)
• 5-HT1B, 1D, 1F—if you boost these receptors vasoconstriction will occur; the “triptans” are used for the treatment of acute migraine headaches**
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The “triptans”--5-HT1B/1D/1F agonists-
• Sumatriptan (Imitrex)(64-70% response rate at 2°) (Treximet—Imitrex (85 mg) + naprosyn (500 mg)• Naratriptan(Amerge)(fewer HA recurrences than
Imitrex)(45% response rate at 2 hours)• Zolmitriptan (Zomig, Zomig ZMT)* (dissolves)• Rizatriptan (Maxalt,Maxalt MLT)* (dissolves)• Almotriptan (Axert)(dec. chest pain, tightness,
pressure)• Eletriptan (Relpax)—faster acting than oral Imitrex• Frovatriptan (Frova) (longest half-life)(45%
response rate at 2°)
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WARNING: Triptans and coronary heart disease
• Triptans stimulate the 5-HT1B receptors on coronary arteries and result in vasoconstriction. This may become clinically significant in patients with underlying coronary artery disease or vasospastic disease—the triptans are contraindicated in patients with CAD
• FYI: More than 50% of neurologists and 75% of headache specialists have migraines
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Serotonin…historical highlights
• 1st discovered as a protein in serum (sero) in 1948, but the Italians actually initially discovered it in the gut in 1933 and called it “enteramine”
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Historical highlights…
• 1958—Serotonin’s ability to contract a rat’s uterus was found to be antagonized by LSD
• And, the question begs to be asked… “Who gives a…”
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Serotonin
• The bigger question needs to be asked…why were they using LSD in a rat’s uterus?
• Triggered research into the role of LSD in causing hallucinations (dopamine/serotonin) and into LSD’s schizophrenic-like effect (serotonin/dopamine)
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Serotonin (a.k.a. 5-HT, or 5-hydroxytryptamine)…
• Serotonin is the most ubiquitous neurotransmitter of all
• It’s found in the central and peripheral nervous systems, it is located in the GI tract, platelets
• ~95% of all serotonin in the body is “enteric” or in the GUT
• Involved in a wide variety of clinical conditions including…
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Digression: The Second Brain...serotonin and the gut
• Drugs such as SSRIs that increase serotonin in the brain and improve mood, also increase the release of serotonin in the GI tract—increasing gastric motility and the release of serotonin from the duodenum
• Side effects—nausea and diarrhea (use Imodium)• Irritable bowel syndrome—brain-butt connection• The histologic changes found in the CNS are also found
histologically in the bowel…HUH?
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Functions of serotonin• Happiness• Sociability/boosts self-esteem/overcomes shyness• Social phobias• Makes you full and feel sleepy• Impulsive eating disorders such as bulimia• Impulse control• Helps to control pain pathways• Nausea, vomiting, gastric motility• Generalized anxiety disorder and panic attacks• Aggression• Extreme violence• Premenstrual dysphoric disorders• Migraines• Penile erections (ejaculation, specifically)
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Boosts self-esteem/overcome shyness
• College fraternity members w/ highest ranking and most friends had 20-40% higher serotonin levels
• Stroke patients and SRIs (i.e., Prozac)—improved compliance w/ rehab
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Boosts self-esteem
• Remove dominant chimpanzee from group• Give a subordinate male fluoxetine (Prozac) • The subordinate took charge, made friends,
organized alliances, and became the top banana.
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Social phobias—off-the-beaten-path phobias
• Arachibutyrophobia—fear that peanut butter may stick to the roof of the mouth
• Erythrophobia—the fear of blushing• Peladophobia—the fear of bald people• Coulrophobia—a debilitating fear of clowns• Bromidrosiphobia—the morbid fear of body odor• Albutophobia—the fear of bathing (this phobia
reared its ugly head with a vengeance after Alfred Hitchcock’s movie, “Psycho”.)
• Hellenologophobia—the fear of complex science terminology
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Plays a role in impulsive eating disorders such as bulimia nervosa
• Bulimia (be aware of girls with Type 1 diabetes and bulimia)
• Binge-eating disorder• Anorexia (?)• Boosting serotonin boosts impulse control• Helps to control binge eating disorders• Fluoxetine (Prozac)• Paroxetine (Paxil)
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• Levels of serotonin activity are abnormally high in anorexics—linked to feelings of anxiety and obsessional thinking, classic traits of anorexia; dopamine levels are also high— “addicted to starvation” (autoimmune? Genetics?)
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Anxiety, panic attacks
• Serotonin—boost mood, boosts self-esteem (“E”, XTC, Ecstasy gives this one a jolt…long term use may deplete the serotonin-containing neurons)
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Aggression--Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
• A breakdown product of progesterone, allopregnanolone, acts on receptors for GABA—has a calming effect; fluoxetine (Prozac/Sarafem) specifically increases allopregnanolone
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Penile erection
• Low serotonin is presumed to be a major part of the cause of premature ejaculation
• SSRIs are used to treat this condition
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Serotonin and depression
• “The FDA this week approved the first-ever transdermal patch for the treatment of depression. Simply remove the backing and press the patch firmly over your mother’s mouth.” ---Tina Fey, on Saturday Night Live (March 2006)
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Serotonin, estrogen and menstrual migraines
• During low estrogen states such as menses (the sudden drop of estrogen triggers migraines)
• Or during the placebo week of oral contraceptives, serotonin levels decrease and the headaches occur
• How about using an estrogen patch 7 days prior to menses, or OC without the placebo week?
• (Lybrel (Wyeth)—first FDA-approved low-dose combination oral contraceptive taken 365 days per year)
• During high estrogen states, ie, pregnancy, serotonin rises and headaches decrease
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Mirror neurons
• Is happiness contagious?• Is depression contagious?• Mom’s and babies…• Nature vs. Nurture
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Serotonin and depression
• Depressed women have 53% less serotonin in the pleasure centers of their limbic system than men
• Increased rates of classic depression in women and this gender difference starts at puberty
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What do women do when we’re depressed? We eat!
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What do we eat?
• In addition to increasing serotonin in the brain, chocolates (boost) anandamide—a substance that closely resembles marijuana (“ananda” in Sanskrit means “bliss”…
• Bliss is a 1 lb bag of M & M’s…
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• Carbohydrates facilitate the entry of tryptophan (the amino acid required to produce serotonin) into the brain
• CHO’s also increase the release of insulin from the pancreas and bingo, you put on weight
• Especially with more than 125 grams of carbohydrates per day
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Implications for low-carb diets• Dr. Atkin’s, South Beach• Is she really that happy? NOOOOOOOOO• Females without carbs—no energy, depressed, and
constipated with halitosis• Men love their red meat – why? (meat contains tyramine, the
precursor to the catecholamines—norepinephrine and dopamine)
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The numbers don’t lie…• From the early 1960s to 2002, the mean weight for
men and women aged 20-74 increased 24 pounds and the mean height increased approximately 1 inch
• During 1999-2002, the mean weight of men over 20 years of age was approximately 190 pounds and the mean height was approximately 5’9”
• Among women, the mean weight was approximately 163 pounds and the mean height was approximately 5’4”
(US Dept. of Health and Human Services, CDC, National Center for Health Statistics, 2004; Available http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/ad/ad347.pdf)
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Weight loss drugs
• The weight loss drugs target the satiety center in the hypothalamus—boost serotonin that tells you – “stop eating, you’re full”
• Redux and Fenphen increased serotonin in the satiety center
• Meridia (sirbutamine)—prevented the re-uptake of serotonin in the satiety center—weak; removed from the market on October 8, 2010 due to the risk (ever so slight) of severe cardiovascular events
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Drugs for weight loss…
• OFF LABEL use of some drugs—metformin (Glucophage), topiramate (Topomax)
• Some new drugs are awaiting approval by the FDA
• NEW possibility but not FDA approved yet…lorcaserin, a selective serotonin 5-HT2C agonist, is in phase III clinical trials—helps to lose weight and MAINTAIN weight loss
• NO increased risk for valvular heart disease like fenphen
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Guys don’t “crave carbs”…they have plenty of self-esteem…
• They think they look like this today…and they DID in the 1960’s
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Serotonin makes you happy in the mesolimbic system of the brain
• The number ONE class of drugs prescribed today for depression are the serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) or the SSRIs Selective SRIs
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The SRI’s (serotonin reuptake inhibitors)…
• 1987—the first selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor was “unleashed” and we all know that drug as fluoxetine, Prozac (Lilly) (longest t½)
• Sertraline (Zoloft)(1992)—shortest t½; excellent choice for elderly depressed patient; may also be useful for mild irritability and aggression
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SRIs (Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors)
• Paroxetine (Paxil)(1992) ++drug interactions; adrenergic effects=tremor—14.7% @ 40 mg/d); most anticholinergic
• Citalopram (Celexa)(2000)—most selective affinity for HT receptors; useful for mild irritablity and aggression
• Escitalopram(2002)(as above) (Lexapro)(#12 of the top selling drugs in 2009)**fewest SE of all SRIs—new use: reduce the number of hot flashes (TAMOXIFEN)
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New antidepressant approved
• Vilazodone HCl (Viibryd)—a combined selective SRI and sertonin 1A receptor partial agonist
• Rx—Major Depressive Disroder• No sexual dysfunction, no significant weight
gain• Nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, insomnia• Boxed warning for an increased risk of suicide
in 18-24 y.o.
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Depression in children• Prozac is still the only drug approved by the FDA for the
treatment of depression in children and adolescents• Prozac has a longer t½ life; Makes withdrawal more gradual
and, it also• Keeps levels steady if a dose is missed (teenagers in particular
often miss or skip doses)• More later…
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Give antidepressants time to work! 3-5 weeks…but monitor closely during this time
• Why does it take so long for anti-depressants to work?
• How long should your patients stay on antidepressants?
• (P.S. escitalopram/Lexapro may ease depressive and anxiety symptoms more quickly than the other SRIs—in some cases by the end of week one)
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Neurogenesis--1998
• Dr. Spickerman• Antidepressants• Statin drugs• What else boosts neurogenesis?• Exercise and meditation
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Other antidepressants inhibit the re-uptake of both serotonin and
norepinephrine--SNRIs
• Other antidepressants inhibit the reuptake of both serotonin & norepinephrine and are called the SNRIs (Venlafaxine/Effexor)(1997); duloxetine (Cymbalta) and desvenlafaxine (Pristiq)(2005)
• Used for depression • Other indications are numerous—more later
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P.S. the “old” antidepressants known as TCAs (tricyclic antidepressants)
• Amitriptyline (Elavil)• Nortriptyline (Pamelor, Norpramin)
• Also boost serotonin and norepinephrine but they are not referred to as SNRIs…
• More later about the clinical uses of the “old” TCAs…
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Other antidepressants
• Wellbutrin (bupropion)—boosts dopamine (energizing and also boosts sex drive; no weight gain)
• Remeron (mirtazepine)—boosts norepinephrine (lots of weight gain)
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The SRIs—side effects• Increasing serotonin may result in decreased dopamine• Dopamine gives you some zip to your doo-dah in the
bedroom• SRIs may result in anorgasmia, loss of libido and premature
ejaculation• What can you do? Zoloft—short half-life• Add Wellbutrin (or switch to Wellbutrin) or amantadine
(Symmetrel) to boost dopamine• Yohimbine? NO; OTC’s? • Estratest?
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Other side effects of SSRIs—lesser known, but important
• Inhibit platelets—bleeding • Bruxism—increase serotonin, decrease
dopamine results in jaw clenching at night• RLS—increased serotonin, decrease
dopamine, increases leg movement• SIADH—dilutional hyponatremia
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A new eating disorder (not yet officially recognized by the DSM, but…)• Orthorexia—obsession about eating the “right
thing”, the “perfect diet”—fixate on eating foods that make you feel pure and healthy
• Overly concerned about preparation techniques—washing foods multiple times and sterilizing utensils
• Food obsessions hinder ADL; strict rules and beliefs about food may lead them to become socially isolated; orthorexics may become intolerant of other people’s view about food and health (Dr. Steven Bratman)
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Other conditions with decreased serotonin…(and increased norepinephrine)—poor self-esteem, lack of
impulse control• Chronic alcohol abuse (also decreases dopamine)• Chronic child abuse (mental, physical, sexual)--
PTSD• Closed head injuries--PTSD • anabolic steroids (“roid rage)• Low cholesterol levels--aggression• Exposure to lead as a child--aggression• When serotonin re-uptake inhibitors are used,
serotonin levels increase, thinking becomes clearer
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Notes on the use of SRIs
• Used for patients with OCD, binge-eating, PTSD, aggression
• Child abuse/spousal abuse—the P’s ↓ aggressive levels by 25%; gives time to reflect—reflective delay; size up situation and prevents immediate reaction
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Do anti-depressants work for everyone?
• NO• Psychotherapy is definitely beneficial• What else can you do?
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Hang around with people that make you happy…mirror neurons
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Get out in the sun!
• Vitamin D and depression—reduced 25 (OH)D levels –depressed patients averaged 37 ng/L, non-depressed—46 ng/L
• Depression rates have increased over the last century
• Humans have reduced their light exposure
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How?• Via urbanization (tall buildings and pollution reduce
UVB)• Industrialization (working inside reduces UVB
exposure)• Cars (glass totally blocks UVB)• Clothes (even light clothing blocks UVB)• Sunblock• Misguided medical advice to never let the sunlight
touch your unprotected skin• (Vitamin D Council, National Institutes of Mental
Health, 2011)
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Will vitamin D supplements help?
• Ongoing research using D3 (cholecalciferol), not D2 (ergocalciferol)
• 400 IU and 800 IU have been shown to positively improve affect
• Larger doses have been shown to improve depression scales
• More research…could help, doesn’t harm
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Exercise…
• Boosts serotonin• Boosts endorphins (for up to 24 hours after
exercise)• Builds new neurons
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Anti-depressants and pain management (neuropathic pain)
• Boosting serotonin and NE in the descending pain pathways helps treat
neuropathic pain• Amitriptyline (Elavil)• Nortriptyline (Norpramin)• Venlafaxine (Effexor)• Duloxetine (Cymbalta)*• *has just been approved for the treatment of
musculoskeletal pain)
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Other drugs for neuropathic pain
• And then, there’s always gabapentin (Neurontin) and pregabalin (Lyrica), and topiramate (Topamax)—more on these drugs later
• Neurontin and Norpramin together have been shown to be quite effective when neither drug works alone (Lancet. September 2009)
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Serotonin 5-HT3 receptors and N & V
• 5-HT3 in the CTZ (chemoreceptor trigger zone of the brain stem) is responsible for vomiting from chemo and post-anesthesia
• 5-HT3 in the duodenum is responsible for nausea– “the organ of nausea”
• Anticipatory nausea and vomiting
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Serotonin antagonists for 5-HT3
• The “setrons” for chemotherapy, postanesthesia-induced, and migraine-induced nausea and vomiting
• Granisetron (Kytril)• Ondansetron (Zofran)*• Dolasetron (Anzemet)• Palonesetron (Aloxi)• + decadron• *approved for morning sickness in pregnancy
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Irritable bowel syndrome
• Too much serotonin? Diarrhea-predominant Rx: alosetron (Lotronex)—5-HT3 blocker• Too little serotonin? Constipation-
predominant• RX. Lubiprostone (Amitiza) Rx: tegaserod (Zelnorm)—a 5-HT4 partial
agonist was approved to increase motility of GI tract (March 30 2007—d/c’d due to CV events—can still get from drug company if nothing else works)
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St. John’s Wort…(the name?)
• “St. John’s wort is the most common herb involved in drug interactions.”
• (Bonakdar RA. Herb-drug interactions: what physicians need to know. Patient Care 2003; January: 58-69.)
Tatro DS, ed. Drug Interaction Facts: Herbal supplements and Food. St. Louis, MO. A. Walters Kluwer Co; 2004; also available at www.factsandcomparisons.com
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Digression: St. John’s Wort for depression
• Does it work? Yes, it has been shown to be superior to placebo.
• May boost serotonin, norepinephrine by mild MAO inhibition; may also boost GABA and dopamine to varying degrees
• Also appears to decrease cytokines and hormones of the stress response (IL-6 and cortisol) that may be responsible for mild depression—INTERESTING EFFECT as it’s the ONLY drug that has shown to reduce cortisol’s effects in the brain—decrease stress? IMPROVE DEPRESSION AND MEMORY
• ??Effective for mild to moderate depression…not severe• Do NOT use with other anti-depressants—especially SSRI’s
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Serotonin syndrome• Adverse drug reaction caused by an increase in serotonin
levels and stimulated central and peripheral postsynaptic serotonin receptors
• Drugs associated with serotonin syndrome include SSRIs, SNRIs (serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors—venlafaxine/Effexor, desvenlafaxine/Pristiq, duloxetine/Cymbalta), MAO inhibitors, TCAs, opiates, OTC cough meds, drugs of abuse, drugs for weight loss, and herbal products (St. John’s wort)
• Also associated with medication withdrawal• 60% of patients present within 6 hours of medication
initiation, overdose, or change in dosage; 74% present within 24 hours (Evans)
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A few notes on Pediatric depression
• The only FDA-approved medication for the treatment of childhood depression (7+ age) is fluoxetine (Prozac) starting dose 10 mg/day
• Do more kids commit suicide on anti-depressants? FDA required warning labels on antidepressants in 2004 after a small but statistically significant increased risk of suicidal thoughts and/or attempts in children and adolescents taking antidepressants
• Studies did NOT show increased suicidal completion, nor did they establish the base rate of suicide that would have occurred without treatment
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A few notes on Pediatric depression
• Studies since that ruling indicate that antidepressants are efficacious in the treatment of pediatric depression and the risks of increased suicidality do NOT outweigh the direct patient benefits of these medications (Garzon DL, Nelson J, Figgemeir M. Management of childhood depression. The Clinical Advisor 2009 (October).
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A few notes on Pediatric depression
• Mood improvement does not take place for a month or more, while side effects tend to appear immediately. This can worsen the sense of hopelessness and contribute to the perception that the treatment is worse than the illness
• Meds increase energy level but the feeling of hopelessness does not lift, and the patient finds the strength to carry out a suicide plan
• The child who with major depression is actually showing the first signs of bipolar illness and will swing toward mania when treated with an antidepressant
• The number of new bipolar diagnoses in kids has jumped 4,000 percent between the years of 1994 and 2003. Dr. Mark Olfson, Columbia University, NYC)
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GABA (gamma-amino-butyric-acid)
• She is “inhibitory”…• NO, NO, NO• Simple amino acid• Similar in structure to the class of drugs
known as the BZ’s…benzodiazepines• Valerian and the GABA-BZ receptor (“stink
weed”) and the Pied Piper
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Benzodiazepines
• Benzodiazepines (anti-anxiety drugs)—first introduced in the 60s as “mother’s little helpers” (Librium w/ slogan— “Whatever the diagnosis—Librium”)
• How do they work? GABA-BZ receptor; GABA is inhibitory and “calms” the brain
• Cause sedation, reduce anxiety; muscle skeletal relaxation; anticonvulsant effects
• Long-acting vs. short-acting
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Anxiolytics/hypnoticsBenzodiazepines— “zepams” and “zolams” *Diazepam—Valium (t1/2 20-100 h)*Flurazepam—Dalmane (40-114)*Quazepam—Doral (25-115)Clonazepam—Clonapin (18-50 h)Lorazepam—Ativan (10-20)Oxazepam—Serax (5 -20)Temazepam—Restoril (10-40)Triazolam—Halcion (2.5)*t ½ is your age in HOURS…**chlordiazepoxide (Librium is also a BZ—wrong last name
tho’—half life as long as diazepam)
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GABA-pentin (Neurontin, Fanatrex, Gabarone)
• The “Swiss-Army Knife” of neurology• Approved for use in 1994 as an anticonvulsant• In 1996, research on other clinical uses began to appear in the
literature• “off label” use for neuropathic pain in the late 1990s• Approved for neuropathy and other chronic neuropathic
patin syndromes in 2002• Major depressive disorder• 2nd generation GABA agonist--pregabalin
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1st approved for seizure disorders
• Glutamate is excitatory• GABA is inhibitory
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Seizures—anti-convulsants and GABA
• Gabapentin (Neurontin)• Topiramate (Topamax)—increase inhibitory effects of GABA
and blocks excitatory effects of glutamate• Tiagabine (Gabatril filmtabs)—inhibits GABA re-uptake• Valproic acid—Depakote, Depakene, Depacon, Stavzor
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A note on valproic acid• Not only an anti-convulsant, but also a mood stabilizer—
PTSD, (bipolar patients)• Survival benefit on the battlefield by preventing acetylation
in cells, causing certain “survival pathways” to be switched on
• Pig research—drained 60 per cent of blood, subjected them to injuries seen on battlefield; gave all of the pigs saline; gave some of the pigs valproic acid, others a blood transfusion and the rest untreated
• Only 25% of the pigs that received saline survived 4 hours, the typical time it takes to get hospital treatment, while 86 percent of those injected with valproic acid lived
• Big fat no-no in pregnancy—birth defects; autism
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More anti-convulsants
• Phenobarbital—enhances GABA-mediated chloride influx through inhibitory neurotransmitter channels
• Phenytoin (Dilantin)—reduces sodium, potassium and calcium currents across neuronal membranes
• Carbamazepine (Tegretal)—same as above (also used with pain syndromes); Equetro is extended release carbamazepine)
• Lamotrigine (Lamictal)—MOA? May stabilize neurons and reduce glutamate release (also known as a mood stabilizer)
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Pain syndromes and Neurontin
• CRPS (complex regional pain syndrome)• Peripheral neuropathy• Pain and spasticity of MS (Botox and Baclofen
for spasticity too)• Trigeminal neuralgia• Migraines (Botox, face lift)• PHN (postherpetic neuralgia)--shingles• Myofacial pain
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Other clinical uses of Neurontin• Radiation myelopathy• RLS (restless leg syndrome)• ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease)• Periodic leg movements• Fibromyalgia• Depression• Bipolar disease• Hot flashes• Inhibits “echo-like” effect in damaged nerves • Boosts GABA inhibition in the interneurons in spinal cord
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Other anticonvulsants…
• Carbamazepine (Tegretol, Carbatrol, Epitol, Equetro)—seizure disorders, bipolar disorder, trigeminal neuralgia
also classified as a mood stabilizer• Topiramate (Topamax, Topiragen)(2006)—seizure
disorders, migraine prevention (investigations are ongoing for the treatment of alcoholism, obesity, reducing binge eating, PTSD, OCD, smoking cessation, neuropathic pain, cocaine dependence); being studied in combination with phentermine to forma a drug called Qnexa to Rx obesity
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GABA and dopamine in chronic alcoholics
• Dopamine is like a toddler-run, run, run; gives you energy
• GABA keeps dopamine in check• Chronic alcoholics have decreased dopamine—no
energy• ETOH takes the place of GABA • When alcoholics don’t have access to booze,
dopamine “rebounds”• Causes the DTs (delirium tremens)
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Alcohol withdrawal syndrome
• The DTs (delirium tremens)• Medical emergency with sx of hallucinations,
confusion, disorientation, generalized seizures and pronounced autonomic activity
• Tachycardia, hypertension, hyperthermia, tachypnea (rapid breathing), tremors
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Alcohol, GABA, and dopamine• Normally, GABA (Mom) inhibits dopamine (toddler—
energy)• Chronic alcohol intake takes the place of GABA and
chronically keeps dopamine levels low (no energy)• When alcohol is removed, it takes dopamine 3-5 days
(or less) to rebound—• “Whoa!” where’s mom? • There is NO mom as GABA has been chronically
depressed from alcohol• Dopamine rebound results in the DTs with s & s of
catecholamine excess
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How do you treat the DTs?
• The GABA-BZ (benzodiazepine) receptor—boosting the GABA receptor with BZ’s during alcohol withdrawal puts the brakes on dopamine rebound; benzodiazepines “act” like GABA
• RX: “Mother’s little helpers”--Lorazepam (Ativan)—1 mg initial dose (range 2-4 mg); diazepam (Valium)—5 mg initial dose (10-20 mg range), chlordiazepoxide (Librium)—25 mg is initial dose (50-100 mg range); oxazepam (Serax)—15 mg is initial dose (10-30 mg range)
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Alternatives
• Short-acting BZs without active metabolites (oxazepam/Serax) or lorazepam (Ativan) are acceptable alternatives in the elderly or in patients with advanced liver disease
• Non BZ anticonvulsants such as carbamazepine (Tegretal), valproic acid (Depakote, Depakene), gabapentin (Neurontin) and topiramate (Topamax) have also been used in detoxification
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Norepinephrine• Gives you energy• Boosts mood• Lack of norepinephrine = anhedonia (the lack of interest in
day-to-day activities)• Drugs that boost norepinephrine make you happy and give
you energy (amitriptyline/ Elavil; reboxitine (Edronax)• Drugs that block norepinephrine have the opposite effect–
lipid-soluble beta blockers (propranolol, timolol, metoprolol, carvedilol) and Prednisone (long-term) for example--anhedonia
• Helps control pain in the descending pain pathways• Fight-flight response and aggression
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Why Petey the pit bull?• Higher levels of L-tyrosine, the precursor to
norepinephrine, the transmitter of aggression• “fight/flight” system• Nothing can terminate a pit bull attack• Increased release of endorphins—may be addictive
at high doses which may explain why they will continue to fight over and over again
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Norepinephrine• Initially large doses of Prednisone cause euphoria
due to the release of norepinephrine in large amounts
• Eventually with continued use, norepinephrine can be depleted
• “steroid psychosis”• Predisone also boosts norepinephrine in your
appetite center• Amitriptyline (Elavil) boosts N.E. in the appetite
center• Mirtazepine (Remeron) does too.
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Chronic stress and norepinephrine
• Long term elevations of cortisol (chronic stress), and perhaps short term bursts (acute stress) can permanently change the structure of the hippocampus
• Cortisol is neurotoxic--direct toxicity to the neurons of the hippocampus
• PTSD
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Lithium (Eskalith CR, Eskalith, Lithobid)
• 1st used for gout in the 1800s as it was able to dissolve uric acid crystals; because of prevalent theories linking excess uric acid to a range of disorders, including depressive and manic disorders; first used to treat mania in 1870s
• 1st used in 7-Up in 1929 as a medicinal ingredient of a refreshment beverage; marketed specifically as a hangover cure (Bib-Label Lithiated Lemon Lime Soda)
• Mood stabilizer• decreases norepinephrine release, increases serotonin
synthesis• Resets biological clock• Boosts neurogenesis
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Who put the dope in dopamine?• What does dopamine do in the brain?• Gives you a huge burst of energy, alertness, and
attentiveness (along with norepinephrine in the brain)• Too much can cause anxiety, fidgety (think cocaine users)• Excess? addiction, psychosis, hallucinations
(schizophrenics) • Boosts sex drive• Bombards the reward system which contributes to its
addiction potential. In other words—wowWEEE! That felt good, let’s do it again, and again, and again
• Movement—get up and get moving; control of voluntary movements and postural reflexes
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So what can we become addicted to?
• Alcohol• Nicotine• Methamphetamine• Cocaine• Morphine• Hydrocodone• Oxycontin• Heroin• psilocybin (magic mushrooms); PCP; • peyote (mescaline);• LSD— “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds”• Methadone• Sex• French fries
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“FRENCH FRIES!!!” You shriek…
• Addictions to food activate the brain in the same way that the brains of cocaine addicts are affected when they think about their next dose. The mere display of food significantly increases metabolism in the areas associated with addiction.
• Who throws on the brakes for Mickey D’s FRIES?
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Dopamine and the reward system
• A critical component of the reward system is dopamine• All addictive drugs release it—and some increase dopamine
much more than any natural stimuli • Stimulating dopamine is the common denominator of all
addictive drugs and behaviors—even tho’ each drug has its own unique effects—the high of alcohol is different than the high of cocaine, heroin or methamphetamine.
• Dopamine is critical for “wanting” something, not necessarily “liking” it…
• With continued abuse of a substance, dopamine increases not as a result of the behavior but in anticipation of the behavior
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Memory and the reward system
• The reward system also has the ability to encode cues to help you repeat the experience
• You remember the night you met the love of your life—the room, the clothes, the smell, the meal…and you look forward to repeating this event (in fact, those initial few years are drenched in dopamine…AND THEN???)
• Oxytocin is released…the hormone of monogamy and comfort
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Let’s get back to addiction• Unfortunately, this “memory” becomes a
problem to the addict—cues that have no particular importance to survival or pleasure—such as a line of white powder, a cigarette, or a bottle of brown liquid—activate the same reward system
• With repeated use, the circuitry adapts to dopamine, and normal pleasures, such as sex, become less pleasurable compared to the drug.
• Addiction is one of the most powerful memories we can have--relapses are common
• For example, nicotine cessation usually take 5 to 7 attempts
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The addict’s brain has been reorganized or “hijacked”
• Drug seeking responses are initiated according to certain cues, therefore it’s critical to help the addict avoid those cues
• Remove the addict from the environment where he has become addicted (30 days is not enough)(airport bars for example)
• Addict has to re-learn impulse control (30 days is not enough)
• The addict needs to be retrained to inhibit impulses toward drug use as they occur (30 days is not enough)
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Early exposure to drugs and alcohol…
• More and more evidence points to “when” you start addictive behaviors increases your risk of lifelong addictions
• Robert Downey, Sr. gave Jr. drugs and marijuana at age 6—thinking it was “cute”…
• “I’m allergic to alcohol and drugs—I break out in handcuffs. –Robert Downey, Jr.
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By the way…• the White House and drug “CZAR” still consider
marijuana as the “gateway” drug…(cheaper drug, more accessible to young kids, feel that it’s not dangerous, so they will try harder drugs?? Higher risk in the first place?)
• Studies have shown that tobacco smoking is a better predictor of concurrent illicit drug use than smoking marijuana
• Even tho’ our problems with prescription drug abuse and methamphetamine are escalating out of control, we’re spending millions to find the one “pot” plant in the basement of an 82-year-old grandmother
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A note or two on marijuana
• At low to medium doses it reacts with anandamide—(means “bliss” in Sanskrit)
• Other effects at low to medium doses—decreased blood pressure, relaxation, reduced coordination, sleepiness, disruptions in attention, altered time and space, illusions and the “munchies”
• Anti-motivational syndrome• Pantoprazole (Protonix) use can test positive for
THC
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Digression: The Teenage Brain
• Dopamine system of rewards is developing during adolescence
• Dopamine is responsible for the “high”—wow, this feels good…let’s do it again!
• Just how good? Sex and crystal meth (in a minute)• Adolescents become addicted faster and with lower
doses of addictive agents including oxycontin, meth, marijuana, alcohol, and nicotine
• hypersensitive to the value of experiences,
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D3 receptors and addiction
• D3 receptors are the “addiction” receptors—imaging studies have shown that the number of D3 receptors in the brains of alcoholics are decreased (is this the chicken or the egg?)
• Does it take more alcohol to stimulate fewer receptors?
• If the level of receptors can be raised, will the alcoholic decrease their alcohol intake? The answer is yes, at least in rats.
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Other transmitters involved in addiction
• Glutamate• Serotonin• Endorphins— “endogenous morphines”— “runner’s
high”…(Candace Pert and the discovery of morphine receptors/Bill Moyers and Healing and the Mind)… “Why Bill…you would be surprised…”
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Boosting dopamine in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease can boost addictive potential
• Parkinson’s disease results from a deficiency of dopamine in the striatal area of the brain; treating PD involves either boosting or replacing dopamine
• Dopamine boosters such as pramipexole (Mirapex) and ropinirole (Requip) primarily stimulate dopaminergic receptors (D1) and the release of dopamine from any remaining dopamine containing neurons
• Side effects—hallucinations (D2), gambling addictions, food addictions, sexual addiction (become sexual pests)(D3)
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Addiction and dopamine agonists
• Pramipexole (Mirapex) is the biggest offender; 1.5% of the patients on Mirapex become pathologic gamblers, alcoholics, gluttons, and sexual pests
• Develops within first month and up to 30 months; usually dramatically clears within one month of stopping drugs
• These are the same drugs used as 1st line Rx—RLS (restless leg syndrome) and can lead to addictive behaviors
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“Well, I started ‘cause I heard that crystal meth was great for sex…” How great might that be?• Well, harken back to your last orgasm…hmmmm…• The POO (plain’ ol’ orgasm) releases 10,000 molecules
of dopamine as the molehill moves…• The methamphetamine induced orgasm releases
70,000 molecules and the earth moves, mountains move, volcanos erupt and of course, you want to do it again…and again…
• The addiction potential is enormous—only 10% of the people who try alcohol will ever become alcoholics whereas, close to 95% of those who try methamphetamine over an entire weekend will become addicted to the drug
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Meth effects: Depletion of dopamine producing cells over the year; rapid aging
• Potent vasoconstrictor—hypertension, strokes, acute coronary syndromes
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Speaking of methods of ingestion• Swallowing pills or ETOH—produces a slow rise in
the brain concentration (depending on how fast you drink of course, and the amount, and gender, etc.)—pills must be digested, absorbed, and metabolized/detoxified by the liver; marijuana brownies
• Smoking a substance—much quicker route to the brain—7 to 9 seconds
• IV drug use—to the brain in 2 seconds; numerous veins used; dorsal vein of the penis; infections (HIV, HCV, staphylococcus, endocarditis, GABHS)
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It’s not just youngsters on drugs…
• Estimated 1.7 million baby boomers addicted to drugs
• By 2020 the number will increase to 4.4 million• First generation to have a high incidence of using
recreational drugs• Long-term risks of pot?• LSD and mescaline? Flashbacks?• Cocaine? Chronic heart disease? Acute MIs?• Heroin? Hypertension, HIV, liver and pulmonary
diseases (67% of heroin users smoke)
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Speaking of methods of ingestion…
• Mucous membranes (as in Witche’s brew-- “deadly” nightshade plant”, henbane (scopolamine for “twilight sleep”, mandrake and on occasion, hemlock—teenagers and alcohol-soaked tampons; champagne enemas; rubbing cocaine on the gums; snorting cocaine and meth (insufflation)
• Anesthesiologists have the highest rate of addiction of all MDs
• Nicotine via the rectum for other reasons in the old days—nicotine receptors in the bowel trigger bowel movements—surgeons and cigars
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Dopamine receptors• D1 receptors (boosting D1 initiates movement and
reduces prolactin secretion) and D2 receptors (psychosis/hallucinations)
• Bromocriptine (Parlodel) boosts D1 receptors in the hypothalamus/pituitary to inhibit the release of prolactin –was commonly given to lactating moms in the old days to dry up breast milk production; the problem was the movement disorder that it triggered
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D2 receptors• D2 receptors are the key targets in dopamine blocking
agents, but blocking the D1 receptor can cause disabling side effects…Parkinsonism, or hyperkinesia and galactorrhea
• The “old” antipsychotics (such as chloropromazine/Thorazine (1952) *and haloperidol/Haldol, Mellaril (thioridazine), fluphenazine (Prolixin), Trilafon (perphenazine), thiothixene (Navane),trifluoperazine Stelazine)—reduced hallucinations and psychosis, but induced a “statue-like, zombie” state and the patients were shooting breast milk across the room!
• *Serendipitous observation that this drug improved symptoms when give as a pre-anesthetic agent
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The newer “atypical” antipsychotics
• Thought to improve negative symptoms, hence the term “atypical”—but no difference between old and new w/ neg sx
• Efficacy is the same—SIDE EFFECTS are different• Block 5-HT2C serotonin receptors (helps to
decrease hallucinations and psychosis) but are also specific for D2 receptors
• Need to block at least 65% of D2 receptors for antipsychotic efficacy; greater than 70% blockade increases S.E.
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The newer “atypical antipsychotics”
• Blocking 5-HT2c serotonin receptor increases weight gain; increased susceptibility to insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes
• P.S. Schizophrenics have ALWAYS had a higher risk of insulin resistance and diabetes LOOONG before these drugs were used…these drugs just help to unmask it
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“Atypical” antipsychotics—mixed D2/5-HT2A antagonists
• Clozapine (Clozaril)(’90)—best of the bunch as far as reducing symptoms and improving negative symptoms. “It’s rare to see dramatic responses in schizophrenia, but those patients who have the diagnosis and yet who present as completely healthy—in terms of the way they dress, talk and so on—those are the people who are likely to be on clozapine—Dr. Dost Ongur, Clinical Director, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School; interviewed in The Carlat Psychiatry Report, December 2009)
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“atypical antipsychotics”
• olanzapine (Zyprexa)(’96), • risperidone (Risperdal)(’93), • quetiapine (Seroquel)(’97), • ziprasidone (Geoden)(‘01), • olanzapine + fluoxetine = Symbyax (approved
for depressive episodes associated with bipolar disorder);
• paliperidone ER (Invega)
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“atypical antipsychotics”
• aripiprazole (Abilify)(’02)• Dopamine system stabilizer (partial agonist at D2
and 5-HT1A/ full antagonist at 5-HT2A)• Iloperidone (Fanapt)—less effective than
risperidone (Risperdal) and haloperidol (Haldol)• Asenapine (Saphris)—sublingual for acute mania
—mouth numbness
•
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Atypical antipsychotics
• Weight gain= Clozapine (Clozaril)(biggest offender) and #2 is Olanzapine (Zyprexa); 10 weeks/10 pounds
• Agranulocytosis w/ Clozapine—1st 3 months; 1/10,000
• Risperidone w/ intermediate wt gain, ziprasidone (Geodon) with least weight gain Clozapine>olanzapine>risperidone/paliperidone>que-tiapine>ziprasidone/aripiprazole
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Atypical antipsychotics
• As the risperidone (≥6mg)/paliperidone/ziprsidone dose increases, so do the extrapyramidal system (EPS) side EPS effects
• But not quetiapine (Seroquel) or clozapine (Clozaril)
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Antipsychotic use in the elderly and mortality rates
• There is a large increased mortality in patients with AD who are prescribed antipsychotic meds
• Evidence of modest short-term benefits of antipsychotic Rx for neuropsychiatric sx, however, at 2 years survival was 46% in the antipsychotic group and 71% in the placebo group; at 3 years the survival was 30% in the antipsychotic group and 59% placebo
• Overall, the risk of death was 42% lower in the placebo group than the antipsychotic group
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Tardive dyskinesia
• Metoclopramide (Reglan) is the most common cause of drug-induced movement disorders (FDA 2/26/09)
• High risk groups? Elderly females (over 65) for longer than 3 months
• Involuntary, repetitive movements of extremities, tongue protrusion, grimacing, puckering/pursing of lips, impaired movement of fingers)
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The “older” antipsychotic drugs
• Did you also know that schizophrenics, in general, are at risk for extrapyramidal symptoms, even WITHOUT drug therapy?
• Tardive dyskinesia was described in the late 19th century, over 50 years before the discovery of the first antipsychotic med; approximately 40% of schizophrenics will develop TD in the absence of treatment (Fenton)
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Temperature regulation and dopamine
• Patients on neuroleptic drugs (central dopamine blockers) tend to have lower basal temperatures (always complaining of “feeling cold”)
• Schizophrenics may be wrapped in a blanket in the summer
• Lower basal temperatures—need to re-consider what is “febrile” in a patient on neuroleptic drugs
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Dopamine and the GI tract
• Dopamine inhibits GI peristalsis• Acetylcholine boosts GI peristalsis• Balance between the two is 50:50• Patient with gastroparesis?• Block dopamine with metoclopramide (Reglan)
allows unopposed acetylcholine and peristalsis• Problem: Reglan is lipid-soluble and crosses BBB;
blocks dopamine in the basal ganglia and can cause a drug-induced Parkinsonism and other movement disorders
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Dopamine—too much? Too little?
• Too little can cause depression (chronic alcoholism)
• Too little can cause too little movement (think Parkinson’s disease or parkinsonism from drugs—like metoclopramide/Reglan)
• Too much can cause too much movement—chorea/athetosis (Huntington’s chorea)(Tourette’s syndrome)(Tardive dyskinesia)
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Too much dopamine
• Huntington’s chorea• Crack cocaine• Carbon monoxide poisoning• Tourette’s syndrome
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Movement disorders…
• The basal ganglia—• Paired nuclei at the base of
the brain• 50:50 balance between
acetylcholine and dopamine• Gamma-amino butyric acid
(GABA) keeps dopamine in check
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Substantia nigra
Subthalamic nucleus
Globus pallidus
Caudate nucleus
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The BASAL GANGLIA…
• Control of movement, initiation and cessation of movement
• Postural reflexes—the righting reflex• Dopamine levels decrease with aging
gradually—we all slow down• Dopamine reserves, in particular, decrease
with advancing age, and medications that may affect dopamine pathways are likely to trigger extrapyramidal effects (Timiras )
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Clinical symptoms
• Anosmia (loss of smell)(may predate Parkinson’s disease by a decade)
• As can REM sleep behavior disorder—in which dreams are accompanied by excessive movement (portends neurodegenerative disorders – including Parkinson’s disease, Lewy body dementia, or multiple system atrophy--that manifest up to 25 years later) (Boeve B, Neurology , August 10, 2010.
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Parkinson’s disease
• Resting tremor (70%)—unilateral or bilateral• Rigidity (vs. spasticity of stroke patients)• Loss of voluntary movements (spontaneous)• Bradykinesia (check gait)• Postural instability (sternal push)• Progression to dementia is common (40-60%)
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Parkinson’s disease
• By the time signs and symptoms of PD emerge, approximately 50% of the dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra have degenerated, and more than 60-80% of dopamine has been lost.
• Treatment is to replace dopamine• The clinical benefit of levodopa/carbidopa varies with
the duration of chronic levodopa treatment• Initially, symptom control is very good and most
patients retain the benefits even if a dose is missed• However, wearing off motor fluctuations can begin as
early as several months after initiation of treatment
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• Dopamine agonists—not as potent; bromocriptine (Parlodel), pergolide (Permax), pramipexole (Mirapex), ropinirole (Requip)
• Side effects: gambling addiction, sexual pests
• Used for restless legs syndrome as well
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Glutamate• The excitatory neurotransmitter• Has been determined to play a major
pathological role in the neurodegenerative disease ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) or Lou Gehrig’s disease
• May play a major role in schizophrenia along with GABA—diffusing into the tissues surrounding the synapse may kill neurons; glial cells are responsible for clearing out glutamate and GABA; glial cells may not be functioning normally
• Plays a role in migraines?
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Possible new treatment, not yet FDA approved: Memantine (Namenda) for migraines
• Females have a lower threshold for a phenomenon called cortical spreading depression (CSD)—bursts of intense electrical activity across the cortex resulting in migraines
• Memantine (Namenda) blocks CSD• Clinical trial reported in the September 2007 issue of
the Journal of Headache Pain found the more than 50% of the patients reported that their headaches were half as frequent and of much less severity (Charles A, Brennan K, et al.)
• Use with Alzheimer’s drugs such as Aricept
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The flu, pregnant women, and schizophrenia
• Mom’s – GET THE FLU SHOT• Higher risk of schizophrenia in fetus’ exposed
to the flu at critical periods of development• Cortical thinning and enlarged ventricles
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How long do drugs stay in the body?
• Blood and urine tests are most reliable; hair samples are not• THC (the substance in marijuana responsible for the high) is detected in
the blood for 4 to 8 hours in frequent users and 3 to 4 hours in non-frequent users
• 9-carboxy THC (product of metabolism of THC) is detectable in urine and blood for much longer periods of time
• Frequent users? 2 weeks up to 3 months in heavy users• Infrequent users? Up to 10 days• Can passive smoke cause + blood tests? For a day or so with heavy smoke
exposure in an enclosed room; most tests have intentionally high standards to avoid false + results due to incidental ingestion
Cocaine metabolites in urine for up to 3 days…some drugs can have a false + as can some diseases
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Bibliography• Alati R, et al. “In Utero Alcohol Exposure and Prediction of
Alcohol Disorders in Early Adulthood: A Birth Cohort Study, Archives of General Psychiatry (September 2006); 63 (9); 1009-16.
• Bailey BN et al. Prenatal exposure to binge drinking and cognitive and behavioral outcomes at age 7 years. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2004 Sep;191:1037-43.
• Enoch M, Goldman D. Problem drinking and alcoholism: Diagnosis and Treatment. American Family Physician 2002; 65(3).
• Matsuo M, et al. Restless legs syndrome: association with streptococcal or mycoplasma infection. Pediatric Neurology 2004; 31(2).
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Bibliography
• Angier N. Woman: An Intimate Geography. 1999 Anchor Books.• FDA February 26, 2009. Metoclopramide and Tardive Dyskinesia• Fenton WS. Prevalence of spontaneous dyskinesia in schizophrenia. J
Clin Psychiatry 2000;61(Suppl 4):10-14.• Mann J. Murder, Magic and Medicine. 2000. Oxford University Press.• Medical Letter. Drugs for Tobacco Dependence. September 2008.• Nicolaou KC, Montagnon T. Molecules that Changed the World. Wiley.• Pert, C. Molecules of Emotion.1997. Touchstone, New York, NY.• Porter R, Madness: A brief history. 2002. Oxford University Press.• Restak R. Receptors.. 1994. Bantam Books.
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Bibliography• Tarascon Pocket Pharmacopoeia, 2010 Deluxe
Pocket Edition.• Trenkwalder, C, et al. The restless legs
syndrome. The Lancet Neurology 2005; 4(8).• Waldman SA and Terzic A. Pharmacology and
Therapeutics. 2009. Saunders.• Winkelman JW, et al. Restless Legs syndrome:
nonpharmacologica and pharmacologic treatments. Geriatrics 2007 (October);62(10):13-16.
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Bibliography
• Glial cells, GABA, and Glutamate. The Carlat Psychiatry Report, December 2009.
• Berner LK, Kriston L. St John’s wort for major depression. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 4. Art. No.:CD000448. DOI:10.1002/14651858.
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Bibliography• Pool Robert. Why do people die that way? NewScientist 2009
Feb 28; 37-39.• Szalavita M, Volpicelli J. Paradoxical Profile: Alcohol’s risks
and benefits. Cerebrum: The Dana Forum on Brain Science 2005 (Winter); vol.7(1):39-52.
• Tonsad S. et al. Effect of maintenance therapy with varenicline on smoking cessation; A randomized controlled trial. JAMA 2006;296:64.
• Trenkwalder, C, et al. The restless legs syndrome. The Lancet Neurology 2005; 4(8).
• Porter R, Madness: A brief history. 2002. Oxford University Press.