Bipolar treatment Flashcards

1
Q

Collaboration with the patient

A

Discuss

  • Available treatment options
  • Target symptoms
  • Potential side effects
  • Drug interactions
  • Dosing strategies
  • Potential toxicity
  • Costs
  • Past trials of medications
  • Involvement of family or friends
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2
Q

Treatment - acute mania

A
  • Likely hospitalization
  • Mood stabilizer (Lithium, Valproic Acid, Carbamazepine)
  • Add an antipsychotic
  • You may also add a benzodiazepine for insomnia or continued agitation
  • Eliminate any mood de-stabilizing agents
  • Decrease stimuli

Immediate goals:

  • Sleep
  • Decrease the thought disorganization
  • Address any psychotic symptoms
  • Prevent dangerous behavior
  • Contact family or support system with permission
  • Support patient in taking time from work and decreasing role responsibilities
  • Understand the treatment and support level when the manic episode occurred (taking meds?, frequency of office visits, family stress, relapse with drugs or ETOH?…)
  • Be sure to address each of the factors that may have increased the likelihood of the manic episode
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3
Q

Treatment - bipolar depression

A
  • Lithium has antidepressant properties, so maximize the lithium dose (Li level of > 0.8 mEq/L)
  • If pt is on valproic acid or carbamazepine, make sure their dose is appropriate
  • Consider augmenting with lamotrigine first
    I- f this doesn’t work, switch to quetiapine monotherapy or olanzapine/fluoxteine combo
  • If the above doesn’t work, consider a mood stabilizer + an antidepressant
  • Include individual therapy

If you treat the patient with only an antidepressant and no mood stabilizer, you may precipitate a manic episode, cause rapid cycling and make their bipolar illness more refractory to treatment

  • ECT is an option for severe bipolar depression
  • Support patient in taking time from work and decreasing role responsibilities
  • Patient and family education
  • Contact family or support system with permission to collaborate care
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4
Q

Treatment - maintenance

A
  • Mood stabilizer (lithium, valproic acid, carbamazepine)
  • Lamotrigine is particularly helpful for bipolar depression, but does not prevent manic episodes
  • Patients may be able to come off of the antidepressant and or antipsychotic medication during this phase
  • Patient education
  • Family involvement
  • Review early signs and symptoms that a depressive or manic episode is starting
  • Individual therapy
  • Contact family or support system with permission to collaborate care
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5
Q

Lithium

A

Mood stabilizer
- naturally occurring cation

Mechanism of action possibly via second messenger system (G Proteins, PIP), enhances serotonergic transmission

30-40% of patients do not respond to lithium

Lithium decreases the risk of suicide

Pregnancy Category D
- Ebstein’s anomaly (malformation of tricuspid valve) –> HOWEVER, the incidence of Ebstein’s is over-reported and Li is actually the mood stabilizer of choice during pregnancy

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6
Q

Lithium - possible side effects

A
  • Nausea, diarrhea, metallic taste
  • EKG changes, conduction delay
  • Thyroid abnormalities, goiter, hyperglycemia***
  • Tremor, sedation
  • Polydipsia & polyuria (25% of pts)***
  • Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus***
  • Mild leukocytosis
  • Wt Gain, edema, dry mouth
  • Cognitive dulling

Dehydration, NSAIDS, thiazide diuretics, ACE inhibitors, Ca-Channel blockers can increase the lithium level due to decreased renal clearance

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7
Q

Lithium - signs and symptoms of toxicity

A

Levels 1.2-1.5: Ataxia, dysarthria, incoordination , increased GI & renal sx, increased tremor

Levels 1.5-2: Confusion, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, slurred speech, course tremor, ataxia
levels 2-2.5: Delirium, abnormal ECG, cardiac arrhythmias, ataxia

Levels 2.5-3: Change in consciousness, acute renal failure, seizure, coma, death

***Hemodialysis can decrease a toxic Li level

Target Lithium level 0.8-1.2 meq/L
Aim for lower in elderly pts
Narrow therapeutic index

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8
Q

Valproic acid

A

Mood stabilizer

  • May be more effective for rapid cyclers and mixed states
  • Check for drug-drug interactions
  • MOA: Increases brain levels of Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), an inhibitory neurotransmitter

Usual Dose Range ~500mg-1500mg/day
Target Blood Level: 75-100ng/dL

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9
Q

Valproic acid - side effects

A

Common…

  • Nausea
  • Diarrhea
  • Tremor
  • Sedation
  • Hair loss
  • Weight gain
  • Increased ammonia levels

Rare…

  • Thrombocytopenia ***
  • Pancreatitis
  • Polycystic ovary disease (studies are mixed)
  • Hepatotoxicity***

Pregnancy Category D

  • Neural tube defects (4%)
  • Liver disease
  • Dysmorphic facial features
  • Cardiac abnormalities
  • Reduced IQ in the infant
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10
Q

Valproic acid - symptoms of toxicity

A
  • You can see toxicity at a level >125 ug/ml
  • Deep sleep
  • Coma
  • Hemorrhagic pancreatitis

***Hemodialysis can decrease toxic levels

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11
Q

Carbamazepine

A
  • Many drug-drug interactions (decreases serum levels of oral contraceptives!!)
  • Not as good as lithium for bipolar depression
  • May be more effective for rapid cyclers and mixed states
  • Inhibits voltage-dependent sodium channels (thus decreasing repetitive neuron firing)
  • Inhibits presynaptic sodium channels (preventing depolarization and neurotransmitter release)
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12
Q

Carbamazepime - side effects

A
  • nausea
  • AV block (rare)
  • afib (rare)
  • ataxia
  • sedation
  • SIADH ***
  • aplastic anemia
  • agranulocytosis
  • weight gain
  • autoinduction
  • hepatitis

Pregnancy Category D

  • Spinal malformations
  • Dysmorphic facial features
  • Cardiac defects
  • Cranial defects
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