Chapter 21 - Drugs for Parkinson's Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Parkinson’s Disease - def

A

a disorder of the extrapyramidal system associated with disruption of neurotransmissions within the striatum.

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2
Q

Parkinson’s results in….

A

Dyskinesias - a disorder of movement.

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3
Q

Parkinson’s affects over ____ American.

A

one million.

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4
Q

Symptoms of Parkinson’s -

A

tremors, rigidity, postural instability, bradykinesia (slowed movement), psychological disturbances (loss of cognitive ability, depression, impaired memory.)

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5
Q

What is the cause of Parkinson’s?

A

Loss of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra.

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6
Q

Dopamine and GABA are inhibitory or excitatory?

A

Inhibitory

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7
Q

ACH is inhibitory or excitatory?

A

Excitatory.

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8
Q

What is the therapeutic goal of Parkinson’s Treatment?

A

Improve activities of daily living, because drugs can’t cure it - just try and get rid of the seconds.

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9
Q

Treatment strategy - Parkinson’s disease.

A

Regain balance of dopamine and ACH, by using agents that directly or indirectly activate dopamine receptors. You can also use agents that block ACH receptors.

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10
Q

What are the two major categories of drugs that treat PD?

A

Dopaminergic agents and Anticholinergic Agents.

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11
Q

Dopaminergic agents - def

A

promote activation of dopamine receptors. - Levodopa (Dopar.)

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12
Q

Anticholinergic Agents - def

A

prevent activation of cholinergic receptors. - Benzotropine (Cogentin.)

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13
Q

Dopaminergic Agents can….4

A

Promote dopamine synthesis, promote dopamine release, directly activate dopamine receptors, prevent dopamine degradation.

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14
Q

Anticholinergic drugs can…1

A

Block muscarinic cholinergic receptors in the striatum.

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15
Q

What are some Dopaminergic Drugs? (6)

A

Levodopa, Carbidopa, Amantadine, Selegiline, Bromocriptine, Bromocriptine, Pergolide

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16
Q

Levodopa - what does it do?

A

increase synthesis of dopamine.

17
Q

Carbidopa - what does it do?

A

Inhibits peripheral decarboxylase enzyme, hence reduce degradation of Dopamine.

18
Q

Amantadine and Selegiline - what do they do?

A

Promote release of dopamine

19
Q

Bromocriptine and Pergolide - what do they do?

A

They activate dopamine receptors.

20
Q

Anticholinergic Drug - 1 - and what does it do?

A

Benzotropine - Blocks ACH receptors.

21
Q

What is a major side effect of Anticholinergic drugs?

A

Xerostomia - dry mouth.

22
Q

Are levodopa and carbidopa combined in treatment?

A

Yes.

23
Q

What is the drug of choice for PD treatment?

A

Levadopa.

24
Q

If a patient fails to respond to levodopa, then what should happen?

A

We should ask ourselves rather or not PD is the correct diagnosis.

25
Q

It only takes weeks to respond to levodopa - T/F?

A

FALSE. It may take months.

26
Q

How can we minimize the gradual loss/wearing off of Levodopa? 3

A

Shorten the dose interval, give drug that increases the half-life (tocapone) and give a direct acting dopamine agonist.

27
Q

We should eat a shit ton of protein with Levodopa - T/F?

A

NO! That could cause it! So avoid it!

28
Q

What’s the MOA for Levodopa ?

A

Enters brain by active transport –> taken up by the few remaining dopaminergic nerve terminals that remain –> converted to dopamine by enzyme decarboxylase, which is enhanced by pyridoxine - vitamin B6!! –> balance ACH

29
Q

Levodopa - Pharmacokinetics

A

Administered orally and rapidly from small intestine, and food delays absorption. Only 2% of dose reaches brain because decarboxylase enzyme metabolizes it.

30
Q

Levodopa - side effects.

A

Nausea, vomitting, Dyskinesias, Hypotension, Psychosis

31
Q

Drug interactions for Levodopa -

A

don’t mix it with antipsychotic drugs (drugs that block dopamine receptors), MAO inhibitors, anticholinergic drugs, or foods with high protein.

32
Q

Carbidopa has a ton of adverse effects - T/F?

A

False! None

33
Q

Why is PD not treated with straight up dopamine? 2 Reasons.

A

Dopamine cannot cross the Blood brain barrier and it has a short half life.