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Psychopharmacology

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Title: Psychopharmacology


1
Psychopharmacology
  • Rebecca Sposato MS, RN

2
A busy brain
  • Receive, process and analyze stimuli (touch,
    sound, sights, smells, taste)
  • Use data to construct thoughts and emotions
  • Receive and produce communication
  • Physiological regulation
  • Move muscles
  • Remember things

3
Brain Anatomy
  • Brain Stem Physiological regulation, instincts,
    emotion
  • Cerebellum Motor coordination and balance
  • Cerebrum thoughts, emotions, memories, sensory
    data and movement
  • White matter cell bodies at surface Gray
    matter cell wires interconnecting
  • Lobes sensory data and decisions
  • Hippocampus/Amygdala emotions, memory
  • Basal Ganglia movement

4
Brain Diagnostics
  • Structural Imaging
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Computed
    Tomography (CT)-
  • Shows structures and shapes of tissues, presence
    of solids, liquids, gasses
  • Functional Imaging
  • Functional-MRI
  • Tagged blood for detecting oxygenation levels
  • Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
  • Shows uptake of glucose by brain cells revealing
    where the location of active brain cells

5
Parts of a Neuron
  • Switching the location of sodium and potassium
    ions sends an electrically charged signal (the
    action potential) down the axon
  • Normally, potassium is concentrated inside the
    cell and sodium outside the cell until the neuron
    opens its channels on the cell wall and the two
    trade places for a microsecond
  • Signals only travel in one direction because the
    channels quickly close

6
Synapse
  • The space where one neuron can start a signal in
    the next neuron
  • Each neuron manufactures only one type of
    neurotransmitter and its corresponding enzyme
  • When the action potential reaches the terminal
    button, the vesicles migrate to the cells
    surface and drop the neurotransmitters into the
    synapse and triggers the next neuron
  • Psychoactive drugs influence one step of this
    process to increase or decrease the firing of its
    neuron

7
Neuroconduction
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v90cj4NX87Yk
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vifD1YG07fB8NR1

8
Pharmacology Terms
  • PharmacoDYNAMICS how the drug affects the body
  • The drugs action on the targeted cells
  • The other cells involved
  • PharmacoKINETICS how the body affects the drug
  • How the body absorbs, stores, moves, destroys and
    eliminates the drug
  • Most often the liver and kidney play a part
  • Therapeutic Index median effective/median
    adverse or lethal
  • The blood level between 50 of users feeling
    better and 50 of users feeling worse

9
Pharmacology Terms
  • Tolerance lower effectiveness of medication at
    current dose level
  • Withdrawal unpleasant psychological and physical
    symptoms experienced when a chemical is abruptly
    stopped
  • Blood Brain Barrier cerebral capillaries have
    very few pores
  • hinders most WATER soluble molecules from
    crossing between blood and brain tissue
  • LIPID soluble molecules can cross
  • Some medications (sinemet) must saturate proteins
    in the blood (albumin) to have enough molecules
    in the plasma to enter brain

10
Anti-anxiety Medications
  • Glutamate tells your neuron to thrill,
    gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) tells your neuron
    to chill (GABA can control Na or K channels)
  • Benzodiazepines ativan (lorazepam), valium
    (diazepam), klonopin (clonazepam), and xanax
    (alprazolam). Controlled substances
  • indirect agonist (mimics) for GABAa, attaches to
    the same binding site (without blocking it)
  • Treats seizures, withdrawal symptoms, anxiety

11
Precautions for Benzodiazepines
  • Impairs attention and motor coordination (ataxia)
  • Due to GABA receptors in the cerebellum
  • More dramatically in the elderly fall risk
  • In higher doses can also mimic the effects of
    GABA in the brain stem leading to sedation
  • Increased affect when combined with alcohol,
    opiates, and tricyclic anti-depressants

12
Insomnia Medications
  • Sedative/Hypnotics Zolpidem (Ambien), temazepam
    (restoril), Zaleplon (Sonata), and Eszopiclone
    (Lunesta)
  • Act on a more specific sub-group of GABA
    receptors, promotes sleep but do treat anxiety
  • Not recommended for long term use
  • Side effects amnesia, ataxia, unusual sleeping
    behaviors (walking, eating etc.)

13
Insomnia Medications - melatonin
  • Melatonin a hormone secreted when dark by the
    pineal gland (b/t midbrain and cerebellum),
    involved in seasonal and circadian rhythms by
    acting upon the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) the
    brains clock
  • Ramelton (Rozerem) melatonin receptor agonist
    (mimics)
  • Not a controlled substance and can be used long
    term

14
The alternative anxiolytic
  • Buspar (buspirone) approved to treat mild to
    moderate anxiety as partial serotonin agonist
    with a mild influence on dopamine-2
  • Does NOT act upon GABA, less sedation compared to
    benzodiazemines

15
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAO-I)
  • MAO the presynaptic enzyme that destroys
    recently reabsorbed serotonin, nor/epinephrine,
    dopamine
  • Inhibitors stop the enzyme from destroying the
    neurotransmitters, increasing their supply in the
    synapse
  • MAO also works in the liver to break down
    tyramine, a chemical in food that tells your
    blood vessels to SQUEEZE
  • Not liked, rarely used
  • Diet restrictions cheese, wine, smoked fish
  • Interferes w/ other meds

16
Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCA)
  • Block to reuptake of norepinephrine or
    norepinephrine and serotonin
  • Amitriptyline (elavil), nortriptyline (pamelor)
  • Narrow therapeutic range
  • Side action block muscarinic (named after a
    mushroom) receptors for acetylcholine

Anticholinergic side effects pupil dilation,
confusion, urinary retention, increase HR
17
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI)
  • Popular anti-depressant
  • Prozac, Celexa, Luvox, Zoloft, Paxil
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vocSptPUBbuo
  • Block re-absorption of serotonin by the
    PRE-synaptic neuron, re-exciting the
    POST-synaptic neuron
  • Serotonin correlates with feeling content

18
Adverse Affects of SSRI
  • Common Weight gain, impaired sexual arousal
  • Terotogenic pulmonary HTN in newborn, heart
    defects, etc.
  • Bleeding risk inhibits platelet coagulation
  • Serotonin Syndrome caused by combining
    serotonin-acting medications
  • Mild restless, sweaty, tachy
  • Moderate HTN, hyperthermia, rigid, lethargic
  • Severe Seizures, shock and coma
  • Serotonin discontinuation Syndrome- abruptly
    stopping after long term use
  • GI symptoms, malaise, moody etc.

19
Alternative Anti-depressants
  • Wellbutrin (Bupronion)/Zyban blocks reuptake of
    dopamine and norepinephrine
  • May treat smoking withdrawal side action of
    inhibiting nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
  • Lowers the seizure threshold

20
Lithium
  • The element is in the same column on the periodic
    table of elements as Na and K
  • Makes neurons less excitable
  • Influences the conduction of neurons though its
    influence on Na
  • Reduce effect of glutamate
  • Mood Stability in bipolar disorder
  • Reduction in number and severity of manic
    episodes, improves depression

21
Precautions with lithium
  • Narrow therapeutic range, lithium toxicity
    threatens all conductive activity in the body
  • Long term use may damage thyroid
  • Goiter, hypothyroid
  • Low sodium enhances the toxicity of lithium
  • Signs of toxicity (gt1.5)
  • Tremor, confusion, N/V/D, arrhythmias, polyuria,
    polydipsia, edema

22
Anti-Convulsants
  • Work through their anti-conductive properties on
    neurons to stabilize mood
  • Carbamazine (tegretol) affects sodium channels
    to reduce firing, prevent and treat mania
  • Side effects anticholinergic, ataxia,
    orthostatic BP, rash,
  • Valporate (depakote) increases GABA to treat
    both manic and depression features of bipolar
    disorder
  • Side effects tremor, weight gain, sedation
  • Serious side effects Fetal encephalopathy,
    thrombocytopenia, pancreatitis, hepatic disease
  • Check drug levels, CBC, liver panel

23
More anti-convulsants
  • Lamotrigine (lamictal) - blocks Na channel,
    preventing the release of glutamate and aspartate
  • prevent mania (does NOT treat acute mania),
    improves depression
  • Rashes may progress to Steven Johnson syndrome

24
Classic antipsychotics
  • Chlorpormazine (thorazine)and Haldol
    (haloperidol) 1950s, 1st psych meds
  • Very broad acting blocks dopamine among other
    neurotransmitters (histamine, nor/epinephrine and
    acetylcholine) to treat positive symptoms of
    schizophrenia and psychoses
  • Anticholinergic side effects
  • Stops dopamines role in the hormone prolactins
    feedback loop, increase levels lead to
    feminization
  • Extra-pyramidal side effects abnormal,
    involuntary and repetitive facial/neck movements
  • AIMS score http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFUr8ltX
    h1Pc

25
Atypical Antipsychotics
  • Treats both negative and positive symptoms of
    schizophrenia
  • Action is more specific to dopamine yielding
    fewer and EPS and anti-cholinergic side effects
  • Many affect the pancreas leading to insulin
    resistance
  • Clozaril- block dopamine in the limbic system
  • Convulsions, bone marrow suppression, low WBC
  • Risperdone- some EPS and weight gain, orthostatic
    BP, CVA risk in elderly
  • Seroquel (quetiapine) - blocks dopamine,
    histamines, epinephrine and serotonin
  • sedation

26
More anti-psychotics
  • Olanzapine (Zyprexa) attaches to specific
    serotonin and dopamine receptors
  • Sedation and metabolic syndrome
  • Apriprzole (Abilify) creates more level
    dopamine levels in the cerebrum

27
psychostimulants
  • Ritalin (methylphenidate), Adderall
    (dextroamphetamines) controlled substances
  • Increase levels of dopamine and norepinephrine by
    inhibiting their reuptake
  • Increase alertness and attention
  • Paradoxical in ADHD/ADD
  • Stratterra (atomoxetine) selective
    norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor
  • Non-stimulant option for ADHD/ADD

28
Anti-dementia
  • Aricept (donezepil), galantamine (reminyl)
  • Interfere with acetylcholinesterase (the enzyme
    that breaks down Acetylcholine in the
    post-synaptic neuron ) increasing its
    concentration in the synapse
  • Mematine (Namenda) blocks the N-methyl-d-aspartate
    receptor, preventing glutamate from opening the
    Ca channels and the resulting corrosion

29
Herbals/Dietary Supplements
  • NCCAM NIH office for alternative medicine
  • DSHEA dietary supplement health and education
    act (1994) law states dietary supplements and
    herbals do NOT need FDA approval before being
    sold
  • FDA may intervene if product causes harm to
    consumer
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