A/31. Norepinephrine and serotonin receptor antagonist antidepressants. Agomelatine. Tianeptine. Agents used for treatment of manic phase of bipolar disorders. Flashcards

1
Q

Drugs need to know in this topic

A

mirtazapine agomelatine lithium carbamazepine valproate

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2
Q

Lithium

Mechanism of action

A
  1. Inhibits inositol monophosphatase enzyme → prevents recycling of inositol
  2. Decreased synthesis of inositol triphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG) → interfere with the action of Gq-coupled receptors
  3. Decreased cAMP levels → interfere with the action of Gs-coupled receptors
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3
Q

Lithium

Pharmacokinetic properties

Drug interactions

A
  1. Oral
  2. Not metabolised, excreted unchanged in urine
  3. T1/2 20 h’
  4. Narrow therapeutic index; requires monitoring of plasma levels to establish effective and safe dosage regimen
  5. Increased plasma levels (risk for enhanced toxicity) → dehydration, NSAID’s, ACE inhibitors, thiazide diuretics (chronic use), loop diuretics (chronic use)
  6. Increased renal clearance (plasma levels decreased) → caffeine, theophylline
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4
Q

Lithium

Clinical use

Adverse effects and toxicity

A
  1. Acute treatment of bipolar disorders (manic-depressive diseases)
  2. Maintenance therapy – decrease frequency and magnitude of mood swings (‘mood stabilizer’)
    #Antipsychotic and/or benzodiazepines are usually required at the beginning of treatment, due to the slow onset of action of lithium
    ##Antidepressant drugs are often used concomitantly during maintenance therapy

Adverse effects and toxicity
1. Flu-like symptoms
2. GI distress (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea)
3. Neurotoxicity: tremors, seizures, ataxia, aphasia, sedation
4. Hypothyroidism and goiter (TSH act via Gs-coupled receptor, lithium as peripheral deiodinase inhibitor)
5. Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, usually reversible (renal ADH act via Gs-coupled receptors)
6. Acute toxicity → nausea, vomiting, slurred speech, hyperreflexia, ataxia, seizures; treat by discontinuing agent, aggressive hydration, consider
haemodialysis
7. Teratogenicity → Ebstein’s anomaly (malformed tricuspid valve, small RV, enlarged RA, tricuspid regurgitation, cardiac arrhythmias)

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5
Q

Mirtazapine

A

Heterocyclic antidepressants

Oral

Major depressive disorders

  • *Mechanism of action:**
    1. α2 selective antagonist
    2. Pre-synaptic α2 receptors are inhibitory (involved in feedback inhibition) → inhibition results in increased amine release from nerve terminals
    3. 5-HT2, 5-HT3, H1 receptor inhibition
  • *Adverse effects:**
    1. Weight gain
    2. Sedation (due to H1 blockade)
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6
Q

Agomelatine

A

Oral

Major depressive disorders

  • *Mechanism of action:**
    1. Agonist at MT1 and MT2 receptors in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (melatonin receptors)
    2. 5-HT2, 5-HT3 receptor inhibition
  • *Adverse effects:**
    1. Weight gain
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7
Q

Valproic acid

MOA

A
  1. Inhibits T-type Ca2+ channels (in thalamic neurons)
  2. Inhibits neuronal Na+ channels
  3. Facilitates the inhibitory effects of GABA (inhibits GABA transaminase)
  4. Increases neuronal K+ permeability (excitation ↓)
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8
Q

Valproic acid

Characteristics

Indications

side effects

A

Oral

Hepatic P450 metabolism

Inhibitor of cytochrome P450
enzymes

  1. Seizures (broad-spectrum; including absence seizures)
  2. Bipolar disorders
  3. Migraine
  • *Side effects:**
    1. GI distress (nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain)
    2. Hepatotoxicity
    3. Thrombocytopenia – requires monitoring of PLT count
    4. Pancreatitis
    5. Alopecia
    6. Weight gain
    7. Teratogenicity → neural tube defects (spina bifida)
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9
Q

Carbamazepine

MOA

A

Narrowspectrum

Inhibition of axonal Na+ channels
Prevent seizure propagation, but not initiation

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10
Q

Carbamazepine

Characteristics

Indications

side effects

A
  1. Oral (well absorbed)
  2. Hepatic P450 metabolism
  3. Inducer of cytochrome P450 enzymes, including enzymes responsible for its own metabolism
  4. Tonic-clonic (generalized) seizures
  5. Partial seizures
  6. Trigeminal neuralgia (1st-line)
  7. Bipolar disorders

Side effects:
1. CNS depression (dose-dependent), ataxia
2. Diplopia
3. Stevens-Johnson syndrome (exfoliative dermatitis)
4. ADH secretion ↑ (SIADH - dilutional hyponatremia)
Osteomalacia
5. Megaloblastic anemia
6. Aplastic anemia
7. Teratogenicity → neural tube defects (spina bifida),
craniofacial anomalies

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