Ch. 4 Pharm: Mood stabilizing agents + Antipsychotics Flashcards

1
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: Indications

A
  • Ind: Prevention and treatment of manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder
  • Examples: Lithium. Anticonvulsant meds, and second-gen atypical antipsychotics.
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2
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: Lithium

A
  • Gold standard for mood stabilization
  • Never take if pregnant
  • Never take long term
  • Know this med! Definitely will be on the Kaplan.
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3
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: action of Lithium

A
  • Lithium is thought to modulate the effects of norepinephrine, serotonin, dopamine, glutamate, and GABA, which may contribute to the symptoms of bipolar
  • the role of anticonvulsants, verapamil, and antipsychotics in the treatment of bipolar mania is not fully understood.
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4
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: Interactions w/ Lithium & one contraindication

A
  • Because lithium is an imperfect substitute for sodium, anything that depletes sodium will make more receptor sites available to lithium and increase the risk for lithium toxicity.
  • Therefore, sweating can cause lithium toxicity. Stay consistent + talk with doctor if training etc.
  • Avoid with kidney damage.
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4
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: Planning & implementation. Lithium’s therapeutic ranges??

A
  • Lithium toxicity is very possible
  • Ranges:
    1. 1.0 - 1.5 mEq/L (acute mania)
    2. 0.6 - 1.2 mEq/L (Maintenance)
  • MUST have periodic blood level monitoring
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5
Q

Mood stabilizing agents: Lithium toxicity

A
  • Initial symptoms: Feeling sick. Blurred vision, tinnitus, nausea & vomitting, severe diarrea
  • Escalates to: Tremors, sedation, confusion, delirium, seizures, coma, cardio collapse, death
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6
Q

Many providers now choose to prescribe ____ or ____ _____ as first line treatment instead of lithium

A

Anticonvulsants or Atypical Antipsychotics

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7
Q

Antipsychotics: Indications

A

Used for the treatment of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders: selected agents are also used in the treatment of intractable hiccoughs, and for control of tics and vocal utterances in Tourette’s disorder.
- Basically: They help decrease psychosis

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8
Q

Antipsychotics: Action of typical antipsychotics (1st generation - FGA)

A
  • Blocks dopamine receptors
  • These are the older types of antipsychotics
  • They work well, but they’re sedating
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9
Q

Antipsychotics: Action of Atypical antispychotics (second generation - SGA)

A
  • More metabolic disorders like diabetes occur with these meds
  • Weaker dopamine receptor antagonists than typicals
  • Potent antagonists of serotonin receptors
  • Some antagonism for cholinergic, adrenergic, and histaminic receptors.
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10
Q

Antipsychotics: Contraindicated

A
  • In hypersensitive, comatose, or severly depressed patients.
  • Elderly patients with dementia related psychosis
  • certain meds for hist of QT prolongation and other heart issues
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11
Q

Antipsychotics: Caution

A
  • With elderly or debilitated patients
  • Patients with cardiac, hepatic, or renal insufficiency
  • pts with hist of seizures, diabetes, temp extremes, hypotension, pregnant people, or children
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12
Q

Antipsychotics: Are they addictive?

A

No. But it can take years to find the right med for the client.

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13
Q

Antipsychotics: Clozapine (Clozaril) details

A
  • Good for suicidal pts.
  • Used for “the sickest”
  • S/E that causes death via a drop in neutrophil count. Needs constant blood monitoring, for in and out patient. Very rare but can happen.
  • Some antipsychotics come in long-acting shot forms. Works for a month or a few months. Most are A-Typical, some typical.
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14
Q

Antipsychotics: List of common Typical Meds

A
  • Chlorpromazine (Thorazine)
  • Fluphenazine ( Prolixin)
  • Haloperidol (Haldol)
  • Perphenazine (Trilafon)
  • Thiothixene (Navane)
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15
Q

Antipsychotics: 4 from the long list of common ATYPICALS

A
  • Aripiprazole (Abilify)
  • Asenapine (Saphris)
  • Lloperidone (Fanapt)
  • Lurasidone (Latuda)
16
Q

Antipsychotics: S/E…there are MANY but some to note:

A
  • Deanna: for dry mouth and eyes just get eye drops or water + ice chips
  • Study them over time
  • Nausea, GI upset, skin rash, sedation, orth. hypotension, tardive dyskinesia
17
Q

Issues in antipsychotic maintenance therapy

A
  • Clozapine (Clozaril) and agranulocytosis risk
  • Extrampyramidal side effects (next slide)
  • Hormonal side effects
18
Q

Extrapyramidal S/E (EPS) & what med to give to help

A
  • EPS is possible with any antipsychotic
  • Pseudoparkinsons’s (tremor, shuffling gait, drooling, rigidity)
  • Akinesia (Muscle weakness)
  • Akathisia (Continual restlessness)
  • Dystonia and oculogyric crisis - can be life threatening (Rigid muscles)
  • GIVE: benztropine (oral or shot) to help reverse effects
19
Q

Antipsychotics: Neuroleptic malignant syndrome

A
  • NMS: rare but life threatening complication of neuroleptic drugs. Fever is the first sign.
  • Symptoms: Muscle rigidity, high fever, tachycardia, bp fluctuations, panting and sweating, stupor, coma
20
Q

Antipsychotics: Tardive dyskinesia

A
  • TD can occur with long-term use of antipsychotics
  • symptoms can be permanent
  • Abnormal involuntary movement scale (AIMS) developed to screen for TD by NIMH.
21
Q

Antipsychotics: Tardive dyskinesia + treatment

A
  • Traditionally treatment for TD is to stop antipsychotics immediately
  • FDA approved 1st med for tx of TD in 2017:
    • Valbenazine (Ingrezza)
    • Deutetrabenazine (Austedo)
      These two meds are not tested on in 331