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Drugs for Psychiatric Disorders

Drugs for Psychiatric Disorders. By Dr. L. Saarmann, RN. Mechanism of Action - TCAs. Factors Affecting Antipsychotic Response. Metabolism Smoking ETOH Diet Herbals Prescribing bias. Antipsychotic Agents. Typical antipsychotics: 1. Phenothiazines a. Aliphatics [ eg . Thorazine ]

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Drugs for Psychiatric Disorders

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  1. Drugs for Psychiatric Disorders By Dr. L. Saarmann, RN

  2. Mechanism of Action - TCAs

  3. Factors Affecting Antipsychotic Response • Metabolism • Smoking • ETOH • Diet • Herbals • Prescribing bias

  4. Antipsychotic Agents • Typical antipsychotics: • 1. Phenothiazines • a.Aliphatics [eg. Thorazine] • b. Piperidine [eg. Mellaril] • c. Piperazine [eg. Stelazine] • 2. Thioxanthenes [eg. Navane] • 3. Butyrophenones [eg. Haldol]] 4. Dihydroindolones[eg. Moban] • 5. Dibenzoxazepines [eg. Loxitane]

  5. Antipsychotic Agents • Atypical antipsychotics: Dibenzodiazepines[Clozaril, Zyprexa] Benzioxazoles[eg. Risperdal] Quetiapine[Seroquel]

  6. Action • Block dopamine receptors in the brain and thus decrease the dopamine concentration in the CNS • Also produce alpha-blocking effect or blockade of dopamine in the CTZ, and peripheral inhibition of the vagus nerve in the GI tract. • Depress RAS

  7. Dopamine Pathways • 1. Mesolimbic-mesocorticalB • 2. NigrostriatalB • 3. TuberoinfundibularB • 4. Medullary-periventricular B • 5. Incertohypothalamic B

  8. Uses • 1. Psychosis • 2. N/V • 3. Pain and sedation • 4. Adjuncts to tx of tetanus • 5. Acute intermittent porphyria • 6. Intractable hiccups • 7. Tourette=s syndrome

  9. Kinetics • Onset gradual • Dosage varies • Reduce gradually • Long duration and ½ life

  10. Side Effects • Most frequent: sleepiness, dizziness, dry mouth, constipation, nasal congestion Also • a. Thioxanthenes = sun sensitivity • b. Haldol = blurred vision, inc weight • c. Clozapine = insomnia, HA, tremors, nausea

  11. Side Effects • Most serious: • Visual changes, hypotensive episodes • dystonia and/or Parkinson like effects [EPS] • akathisia, pacing, insomnia • tardive dyskinesia • clozapine can cause agranulocytosis, hypotension, tachycardia, seizures. • Neuroleptic malignant syndrome -

  12. Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome • SX : • Rigidity • Autonomic instability – • Hyperthermia - • Change in LOC • Labs: • CPK high • WBC high with shift to the left • ABG = resp acidosis and later metabolic acidosis

  13. Drugs • Phenothiazines: • Chlorpromazine [Thorazine] • Fluphenazine[Prolixin] -   • Thioxanthenes: • Thiothixene[Navane] – • Butyrophenones • Haloperidol [Haldol] - often EPS, low others • Dihydroindolones • Molindone[Moban] - • Dibenzoxazepines: • Loxapine[Loxitane]

  14. Drugs • Dibenzodiazepines: • Clozapine [Clozaril] - unique - works on serotoninergic, adrenergic, and cholinergic neurotransmitter systems of the brain, as well as dopaminergic. high risk of agranulocytosis.. • Olanzapine (Zyprexa) – • Benzisoxazoles: • Risperidone [Risperdal] -. Blocks serotonin and dopamine receptors. Indicated for schizophrenic sx, such as delusion, hallucinations, depression and apathy. SE: wt gain, dec. BP, difficulty c concentration • quetiapine [Seroquel] – blocks serotonin and dopamine receptors. Taken BID or TID.

  15. Drugs • Aripiprazole [Abilify] – for both positive and negative symptoms. Low EPS. Relatively high cardiovascular risk. • Is both a dopamine antagonist and agonist in different parts of the brain.

  16. Geriatrics • Higher serum levels • Need lower doses • More prone to • orthostatic hypotension, anticholinergic SE, EPS, and sedation • Increased anxiety c TCAs • Lithium more toxic

  17. Peds • Greater risk of EPS • TCAs usually not for kids • Lithium decreased bone formation/density

  18. Nursing • be alert for signs of agranulocytosis • make sure they get eye checks. • Look for signs of tardive dyskinesia • Look for signs of NMS. • Give IMs slowly into big muscle • Ptmay need drug holidays to decrease SE. • Phenothiazines – • avoid ETOH and other CNS depressants. • Increase intake of Vit B2 - • Avoid extremes of temperature.

  19. TCAs • Major differences in SE - sedation, anticholinergic, postural hypotension • Action: correct imbalance of neurotransmitter at the nerve endings in the CNS. Long 2 life - 15-30 hrs, • Effects: also block muscarinic, histaminergic, adrenergic, dopaminergic, and serotonergic receptors.

  20. TCAs • Uses: • txdepression. • enuresis. • obsessive-compulsive disorders.

  21. TCAs • SE: • tachycardia, • HA, • nausea, • dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention, • blurred vision, • sedation • wtgain, • hypotension, • EPS.

  22. TCAs • Drugs: • amitriptyline [Elavil] • Amoxapine[Asendin] – • Doxepine[Sinequan]

  23. SSRIs • Action: inhibit reuptake of serotonin at synapse • Uses: • depression, • bipolar disorder, • obsessive-compulsive disorder, • panic attacks, • myoclonus. • substance abuse problems.

  24. SSRIs • SE: • HA, • dizziness, • tremor, • insomnia, • fatigue, • N/D/C, dry mouth, • sweating, • male sexual dysfunction. • Central serotonin syndrome

  25. Interactions • all SSRIs inhibit liver isoenzymes [P-450] • B-blockers, TCA=s, antipyschotics, antiarrhythmic. • very protein bound

  26. Drugs • bupropion [Wellbutrin] • Trazadone[Desyrel] • Fluoxetine [Prozac] – • Paroxetine [Paxil] • Sertraline [Zoloft] • Venlafaxine [Effexor]

  27. MAOIs • Action: inhibit MAO --> increased levels of neurotransmitter • Interactions: DO NOT GIVE WITHIN 2 WEEKS OF TRICYCLICS OR SSRI’S • interacts with foods containing tyramine hypertensive crisis.

  28. Tyramine Foods • High - not allowed at all: • aged cheeses [cheddar, blue, Swiss, Camembert, etc] • smoked or pickled meats, fish, poultry [herring, sausage, salami, pepperoni, corned beef] • yeast extracts [Brewer’s yeast] • red wines • fava beans

  29. Tyramine Foods • Moderate - may eat small amts • meat extracts [bouillon, consomme] • light and pale beer • ripe avocado

  30. Tyramine Foods • Small - may eat • distilled spirits [vodka, gin, rye, scotch] • American cheese, mozzarella cheese, cottage cheese, cream cheese • chocolate and caffeine • fruit [figs, raisins, grapes, pineapple, oranges] • soy sauce • yogurt, sour cream

  31. MAOIs • Drugs • phenelzine [Nardil] • tranylcypromine [Parnate] • Contraindications: • active ETOH abuse, CHF, pheochromocytoma, serverehepatic impairment, renal impairment.  

  32. Lithium • Action: • Decrease postsynaptic receptor sensitivity • Stabilize cell membranes • Blockade of tri-and diphosphate system in CNS • Kinetics • Not metabolized

  33. Lithium SE • Most common: • cognitive dysfunction - confusion, poor memory, slowness. • Less common: • tremors of hands, thirst, nausea, increased urination, diarrhea. tachycardia, increased weakness, weight gain, resp difficulties on exertion, fainting, irreg pulse. • Early signs of tox include: • anorexia, diarrhea, muscle weakness, nausea, vomiting, slurred speech, drowsiness.

  34. Antianxiety Agents • Benzodiazepines - depress activity in the limbic system by increasing GABA. •  Uses: • anxiety, • sedation, • muscle relaxation, • seizures, • ETOH withdrawal, etc.

  35. Antianxiety Agents • SE: • drowsiness, sedation, • loss of coordination, • dizziness, • blurred vision, • HA, • N/V/C, dry mouth, • paradoxical reactions

  36. Antianxiety Agents • Drugs: • alprazolam [Xanax] • Chlordiazepoxide [Librium] • Diazepam [Valium] • Lorazepam [Ativan]

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