1 / 51

Pharmacological Management of Behavioral Problems

Pharmacological Management of Behavioral Problems. Should I give a medication…. Or just take one myself?. Dr. Gordon Thomas Geriatric Psychiatrist Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre. Psychotropic drugs Part of the overall approach. Psychotropic:

lilac
Download Presentation

Pharmacological Management of Behavioral Problems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pharmacological Management of Behavioral Problems Should I give a medication… Or just take one myself? Dr. Gordon Thomas Geriatric Psychiatrist Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre

  2. Psychotropic drugs Part of the overall approach • Psychotropic: • Any drug capable of affecting the mind, emotions, and behavior • Examples • Antidepressants • Antipsychotics • Anxiolytics/Sedatives • Mood stabilizers • Cognitive stabilizers

  3. Psychotropic drugs Part of the overall approach Behaviors that Do Not respond to Medication: • Wandering / pacing • Exit-seeking • Sundowning • Hoarding • Rummaging • Resistance to care • Sexual disinhibition • Inappropriate dressing/disrobing • Inappropriate voiding/defecation • Swearing • Screaming/repetitive vocalizations • Spitting

  4. Psychotropic drugs Part of the overall approach Causes of behaviors that May respond to Medication: • Anxiety • Depression • Mania • Psychosis • Sleep disruption • Aggression • Frontal disinhibition • General medical illness • Infections • Medication side effects • Delirium • Pain • Agitation

  5. How the body handles drugs: Pharmacokinetics

  6. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Changes in how the body handles drugs • Absorption • Distribution • Metabolism • Elimination

  7. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Absorption • Slower in elderly patients • Decreased motility and gastric pH • No clinical significance without overt disease • Can be delayed by other medications • Antacids • Aluminum containing cathartics • Calcium/Magnesium • Fibre

  8. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Distribution (fat / water / protein bound) • Higher fat:muscle and fat:water ratios • Lipid soluble medications stored and take longer to clear • Most psychotropics are lipid soluble • Lower protein (albumin) levels • Not clinically significant by itself • Multiple medications bind protein and may compete

  9. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Metabolism • Phase I: oxidation before entering circulation • Decreased in elderly = more active drug in system • Phase II: conjugation/glucuronidation • Relatively unaffected • Other changes decrease this process • Reduced liver blood flow (40-45%) • Reduced liver mass • Some activate or deactivate the process • Decrease or increase levels of active drug

  10. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Elimination • Decreased renal function with age • GFR decreases yearly from age 20 • Calculated CrCl needed (eGFR is inaccurate) • Decreased response to volume changes • More likely to have abnormal electrolytes (SIADH)

  11. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Illnesses alter handling of drugs • Gastric surgery • Heart failure • Liver disease • Renal disease • Malnutrition

  12. How the drugs affect the body: Pharmacodynamics

  13. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Changes in how drugs affect the body • Increased sensitivity • Changes in receptor density • Decreased responsiveness of regulatory systems • Direct sensitivities (stroke, Parkinson’s, dementia)

  14. Psychotropic drugs Use in the Elderly • Different approach to using medications • “Start low and go slow” • Overall therapeutic dose often unchanged • Longer time to get a clinical response • Can be toxic at “therapeutic levels” • More vulnerable to some side effects

  15. The happy pill… Antidepressants

  16. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • Antidepressant usage • Depression treatment/prevention • Anxiety • Sleep disruption • Agitation • Frontal symptoms / Behaviors • Pain control

  17. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • SSRI (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor) • Celexa (citalopram): few drug interactions • Cipralex (escitalopram): few drug interactions • Zoloft (sertraline): minor interactions • Luvox (fluvoxamine): more interactions, sedating • Effective and well tolerated • Depression/anxiety, agitation, behaviors • Prozac (fluoxetine): half-life too long • Paxil (paroxetine): too anticholinergic

  18. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • SNRI (Serotonin Noradrenaline Reuptake Inhibitor) • Effexor (venlafaxine) • Cymbalta (duloxetine) • Effective and well tolerated • Depression/anxiety, (behaviors) • Neuropathic pain • Nociceptive pain (new indication)

  19. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • NaSSA (Noradrenergic and Selective Serotinergic Antidepressant) • Remeron (mirtazapine) • Effective and well tolerated • Depression/anxiety, sleep disturbance, appetite • (behavior), (pain)

  20. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • NDRI (Norepinephrine-Dopamine Reuptake Inhibitor) • Wellbutrin (bupropion) • Effective and well tolerated • Depression • May worsen anxiety

  21. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • TCA (Tri-Cyclic Antidepressant) • Nortriptyline, Desipramine • Amitriptyline, Imipramine • Effective but poorly tolerated • Cardiac effects (hypotension, tachycardia) • Increased fall risk • Anticholinergic effects • Dry mouth, confusion, constipation, confusion, urinary retention, confusion, blurred vision, confusion

  22. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • MAOI (MonoAmine Oxidase Inhibitor) • Parnate, Nardil • Poorly tolerated due to need for diet (yuck!) • Mannerix (Moclobemide) • No need for diet • Less effective and poorly studied in elderly

  23. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • Trazodone • Not used for depression (need high doses) • Used at low doses • Sleep initiation • Anxiety • Agitation • Frontal symptoms

  24. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants

  25. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants

  26. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • Common questions • When should the dose increase? • When should the drug stop? • How long does it take to work? • What if it doesn’t work? • What other options are there? • What about ECT?

  27. Psychotropic drugs Antidepressants • Common Uses • Depression and Anxiety • Pain (Effexor & Cymbalta) • Sleep (Remeron & Trazodone) • Frontal Disinhibition • Smoking Cessation (Wellbutrin)

  28. The crazy pill… Antipsychotics

  29. Psychotropic drugs Antipsychotics • Antipsychotic usage • Schizophrenia / Delusional disorders • Psychotic depression • Delirium • Dementia with behavioral problems These are not first choice medications

  30. Psychotropic drugs Antipsychotics • Atypicals (newer medications) • Risperidone (Risperdal) • Olanzapine (Zyprexa) • Seroquel (Quetiapine) • Zeldox (Ziprazidone) • Abilify (Aripiprazole) • Fewer side effects than older medications • Still need to be used cautiously • Sedation, weight gain, risk of falls, risk of stroke • Small increase in mortality

  31. Psychotropic drugs Antipsychotics • Typicals (older drugs) • Haldol, Perphenazine, Nozinan, Loxapine, Chlorpromazine, others… • More side effects, higher risks • Parkinsonian symptoms • Tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, restlessness, falls • Cognitive blunting • Tardive dyskinesia • Increased mortality

  32. Psychotropic drugs Antipsychotics

  33. Psychotropic drugs Antipsychotics • Common questions • When should the dose increase? • When should the drug stop? • How long does it take to work? • What if it doesn’t work? • What other options are there? • When should they not be used?

  34. The sleepy pill… Anxiolytic / sedative hypnotics

  35. Psychotropic drugsAnxiolytics • Anxiolytics / Sedative Hypnotic use • Use is controversial in elderly patients • Sleep • Anxiety • Behavioral management • Alcohol withdrawal

  36. Psychotropic drugsAnxiolytics • Benzodiazepines • Alprazolam (Xanax) • Diazepam (Valium) • Flurazepam (Dalmane) • Clonazepam (Rivotril) • Non-benzodiazepines • Zopiclone (Imovane) • Zolpidem (Ambien) • Zaleplon (Starnoc) • Lorazepam (Ativan) • Oxazepam (Serax) • Temazepam (Restoril)

  37. Psychotropic drugsAnxiolytics • Side effects • Drowsiness / fatigue • Memory impairment / confusion • Chronic use can meet criteria for dementia • Weakness • Incoordination / ataxia • Depression • Disinhibition / behavior problems • Paradoxial reactions • Decreased sleep quality and worsened apnea • Tolerance and withdrawal symptoms • Elderly (especially with dementia) are more sensitive

  38. The steady pill… Mood stabilizers

  39. Psychotropic drugs Mood Stabilizers • Mood stabilizer use • Bipolar disorder (mania & depression) • Augmentation of antidepressants

  40. Psychotropic drugs Mood Stabilizers • Lithium • Effective for mania and depression • Effective in lower doses for augmentation • Water soluble and cleared by kidneys • Serum levels must be monitored • 0.4 – 0.7 mmol/L (not 0.8 – 1.5 mmol/L) • Lower levels for augmentation (0.3 - 0.6 mmol/L)

  41. Psychotropic drugs Mood Stabilizers • Lithium side effects • nausea, anorexia, diarrhoea,vomiting • weight gain, sedation • subjective memory loss and slowing • tremor, parkinsonism, ataxia • High serum levels are toxic • Increased side effects, delirium • Hold and check level if losing fluid

  42. Psychotropic drugs Mood Stabilizers • Anticonvulsants • Valproic acid (Epival) • GI upset, somnolence, alopecia, tremor, weakness, increased liver enzymes, gait instability • Lamotragine (Lamictal) • Gabapentin (Neurontin) • Carbamazepine (Tegretol) • some evidence of cognitive impairment caused by these drugs

  43. The memory pill… Cognitive stabilizers

  44. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Cognitive Stabilizer use • Stabilizers not Enhancers • Preservation of Abilities • Management of Behaviors • Stabilization of Cognitive function • Decrease caregiver time • Delay Entry into LTC setting

  45. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Cholinergic agents • Aricept (donepezil) • Reminyl (galantamine) • Exelon (rivastigmine) • Effective for Mild to Severe dementias • Stabilize cognition for 1-2 years • Still some benefits even when decline resumes

  46. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Cholinergic agents • Side Effects (MIND) • Muscle cramps • Insomnia / nightmares • Nausea *** • Diarrhea • Caution with: • COPD, heart block, seizures, ulcers

  47. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Glutaminergic agents • Ebixa (memantine) • Effective for Moderate to Severe dementias • Stabilize cognition for 1-2 years • Small number have some improvement • Small number get more confused • Not covered by ODB ($120 per month)

  48. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Glutaminergic agents • Side Effects (CHECK) • Confusion • Headache • Equilibrium (dizziness) • Constipation • Kidney function • Dosage depends on CrCl (eGFR is not adequate)

  49. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers • Who might benefit? • Alzheimer’s dementia • Vascular dementia • Mixed Dementia • Lewy-Body Dementia • Other neuropsychiatric disorders • i.e. Parkinsons-related Dementia Fronto-temporal dementia can get worse

  50. Psychotropic drugs Cognitive Stabilizers

More Related