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ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS

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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * SIDE EFFECTS, cont d. Parkinsonian syndrome neuroleptic malignant syndrome akathisia acute dystonic reactions tardivie dyskinesia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS


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PSYCHOSIS
  • A syndrome of chronic disordered thinking and
    disturbed behavior (schizophrenia, mania,
    depression)
  • Deficits in integrating thought and perception
    with emotion (some refer to a loss of cognitive
    control)
  • ?paranoid delusions/thought insertion/ideas of
    reference
  • ?hallucinations (generally auditory, but can be
    visual)
  • ?loss of affect/poverty of speech/social
    withdrawal
  • ?impaired ability to function with others
  • ?idiopathic or organic etiology
  • Prevalence of schizophrenia 1 of population
    worldwide

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MENTAL ILLNESSES
  • Environmental factors
  • Maturational factors
  • Neuronal connectivity
  • Neurotransmitters
  • Receptors/drug targets

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Schizophrenia
  • Environmental Factors
  • Exposure to infections Toxic/Traumatic
    ( in utero) Insults
  • ALTERATIONS IN NEURODEVELOPMENT
  • Autoimmunity Stress during gestation or
    early in childhood/adolescence

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Maturational Processes
  • Apoptosis Synaptic Pruning Myelination
    (prenatal to adolescence)

Unmasking Genetic Vulnerability
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Neuronal Plasticity
  • Structural changes during development and in
    response to environmental factors
  • Changes in neurotransmitter activity in response
    to environmental factors
  • Neurotrophic factors and changes in gene
    transcription
  • (eg. neuroregulin-1 which regulates neuronal
    migration)
  • Continues throughout life of the organism
  • Underlies learning and memory

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NEURONAL CONNECTIVITY
  • Functional activity in neocortex of schizophrenic
    patients may be decreased
  • Myelination
  • Synaptic pruning
  • Hormonal effects of puberty
  • Exposure to stressors
  • Defective connections in midbrain, nucleus
    accumbens, thalamus, temporo-limbic and
    prefrontal cortex

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STRUCTURAL BRAIN CHANGES IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • Schizophrenics show deficits in tasks involving
    prefrontal cortex or those requiring working
    memory
  • Prefrontal cortical thickness is reduced 5-10,
    neuron size is down, but no change in neuron
    number
  • Synaptic connectivity is reduced
  • Medial dorsal thalamus shows 30 reduction in
    neuron number
  • Prefrontal cortex receives fewer projections from
    the thalamus
  • Hippocampus shows altered cytoarchitecture

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The Dopamine Hypothesis
  • Schizophrenia results from excess activity of
    dopamine neurotransmission
    because
  • ALL antipsychotic drugs block dopamine
    receptors.
  • Stimulant drugs which act through dopamine can
    produce schizophrenic-like
    behaviors (eg.amphetamines).
  • Levodopa, a dopamine precursor, can exacerbate
    schizophrenic symptoms, or occasionally elicit
    them in non-schizophrenic patients.
  • Higher levels of dopamine receptors measured in
    brains of schizophrenics.
  • Brain DA increases during psychotic episodes
    but not during remissions.

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A HYPOTHESIS IN TRANSITION
  • All antipsychotic drugs which block dopamine
    receptors do not reverse all symptoms
  • positives are more responsive
  • negatives may even be exacerbated
  • Antipsychotics blocking DA and 5-HT receptors
    seem better for both positive and negative
    symptoms
  • NMDA glutamate--based on effects of PCP in humans
  • DA metabolites in CSF plasma not significantly
    elevated in schizophrenics
  • Antipsychotic drugs block DA receptors
    immediately but antipsychotic benefits take
    several days to weeks to occur

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New Findings
Polymorphism of COMT gene with increased activity
and more efficient metabolism of DA leading
to lower than normal prefrontal cortex DA
releasehypofrontality Polymorphism of ?-7
nAChR on chromosome 15 as cause of disturbance in
sensory gatingnormalized by nicotine Partial
D-2 agonist and 5-HT-2/5-HT-1a antagonist
effective for positive/negative symptomatology
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DOPAMINE RECEPTORS THE HOLY GRAIL FOR
ANTIPSYCHOTIC MEDS?
  • Dopamine recognized as a neurotransmitter in the
    1950s
  • Five dopamine receptor subtypes D-1,-2,-3,-4,-5
  • Drug naive schizophrenics show elevated D2
    receptor number
  • Cortex has much higher amounts of D1 than D2
    receptors
  • chronic antipsychotic drugs downregulate D1s in
    the cortex and striatum

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THE HOLY GRAIL FOR MEDS, CONTD
  • Striatum has high concentrations of D1 D2
    receptors
  • All effective antipsychotics possess some
    threshold level of D2 receptor blockade
  • striatal D2s may be the site for antipsychotic
    drug-induced movement disorders
  • clozapine upregulates cortical D2s at doses that
    do not affect striatal D2s
  • Limbic structures contain high concentrations of
    D4s
  • clozapine has high affinity for D4s, but
    selective D4 antagonists fail to show
    antipsychotic efficacy
  • Serotonin inhibits dopamine neurotransmission
  • atypicals show serotonin binding ability

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DRUG TARGETS,CONTD
  • The newer atypicals have the ability to block
    the behavioral effects of phencyclidine (PCP)
  • PCP elicits behavioral/ cognitive symptoms
    indistinguishable from schizophrenia
  • PCP is an uncompetitive blocker of NMDA-glutamate
    ion channel function

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NEUROTRANSMITTERS
  • Overactivity of dopamine in limbic regions
    (positive symptoms?)
  • Abnormalities in dopamine storage, vesicular
    transport, release or reuptake
  • NMDA-glutamate hypofunction (negative symptoms?)

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ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS
  • no compound can target a given symptom
  • therapeutic effects correlated to potency at D-2
    dopamine receptors
  • all have effects on other non-dopamine receptors
    (side-effects, or therapeutic effects)
  • can also be used for Tourettes, control of acute
    mania, intractable hiccups, choreas and ballisms

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DRUG TARGETS
  • Dopamine receptors D1, D2, D3, D4, D5
  • Serotonin receptors 5-HT-1A, 2A, 3, 6, 7
  • Norepinephrine ?-1 ?-2
  • Muscarinic acetylcholine mACh-1 4
  • Histamine H-1 2
  • Dopamine, norepinephrine serotonin transporters
  • NMDA-glutamate receptor

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Dopamine Receptors
Occupancytherapeutic vs. side effects At
therapeutic doses the classical antipsychotics
occupy gt75 of dopamine D-2 receptors. 85
occupancy needed to get extrapyramidal side
effects. Clozapine, the atypical, blocks only
35 D-2 receptors at therapeutic doses.
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DRUG CLASSES
  • Phenothiazines eg. chlorpromazine
  • Thioxanthenes
  • Butyrophenones eg. haloperidol
  • Diphenylbutylpiperidine
  • Dihydroindolone
  • Dibenzoxazepines eg. clozapine
  • Benzisoxazol eg. risperidone

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PHARMACOLOGICAL PROPERTIES
  • Neuroleptic syndrome
  • suppression of spontaneous behavior
  • loss of initiative and interest (anhedonia)
  • loss of affect and emotional content
  • slowness of movement
  • Parkinson-like extrapyramidal effects
  • Unpleasant when given to non-psychotic individual

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TYPE MANIFESTATIONS MECHANISM
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Spectrum of Adverse Effects Caused by
Antipsychotic Drugs
  • Low Potency
  • Fewer extrapyramidal reactions (especially
    thioridazine)
  • More sedation, more postural hypotension
  • Greater effect on the seizure threshold,
    electrocardiogram (especially thioridazine)
  • More likely skin pigmentation and
    photosensitivity
  • Occasional cases of cholestatic jaundice
  • Rare cases of agranulocytosis
  • High Potency
  • More frequent extrapyramidal reactions
  • Less sedation, less postural hypotension
  • Less effect on the seizure threshold, less
    cardiovascular toxicity
  • Fewer anticholinergic effects
  • Occasional cases of neuroleptic malignant
    syndrome

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SIDE EFFECTS, contd.
  • Parkinsonian syndrome
  • neuroleptic malignant syndrome
  • akathisia
  • acute dystonic reactions
  • tardivie dyskinesia

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Comparison of Tardive Dystonia and
Tardive Dyskinesia
  • Tardive dystonia
  • Strikes younger
  • Strikes sooner in the course of neuroleptic
    treatment
  • Poor prognosis
  • More males
  • Patients with mood disorders may be more
    susceptible
  • Anticholinergics may improve condition
  • Tardive dyskinesia
  • Strikes older
  • Strikes later in the course of neuroleptic
    treatment
  • Variable prognosis
  • More females (?)
  • Patients with mood disorders may be more
    susceptible
  • Anticholinergics usually worsen condition

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TABLE 6. Comparison of Tardive Dystonia and
Tardive Dyskinesia
  • Tardive dystonia
  • Strikes younger
  • Strikes sooner in the course of neuroleptic
    treatment
  • Poor prognosis
  • More males
  • Patients with mood disorders may be more
    susceptible
  • Anticholinergics may improve condition
  • Tardive dyskinesia
  • Strikes older
  • Strikes later in the course of neuroleptic
    treatment
  • Variable prognosis
  • More females (?)
  • Patients with mood disorders may be more
    susceptible
  • Anticholinergics usually worsen condition

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SIDE EFFECTS
  • Autonomics--related to blockade of alpha-
    adrenergic and muscarinic receptors
  • Endocrine effects, primarily prolactin increases
  • Disruption of thermoregulatory control
  • Hypersensitivity reactions eg. agranulocytosis
    with clozapine browning of vision with
    thioridizine

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Stress Schizophrenia
  • Schizophrenic patients have altered sensitivity
    to stress
  • They display abnormalities in autonomic nervous
    system and hypothalmic-pituitary adrenal function
    in response to stress
  • Coping abilities seem best preserved in
    schizophrenics who suffer the least negative
    symptoms
  • Cognitive deficits in schizophrenics may cause
    them to be less well adapted to their environment
  • Schizophrenics have difficulty filtering incoming
    sensory stimuli

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Indications for Antipsychotic Drugs
Schizophrenia Schizoaffective disorders Acute
control of mania Tourettes syndrome Huntington
s chorea and ballism Intractable hiccups
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