Anxiolytics and anxiety Flashcards

1
Q

Generation of anxiety

A
  • Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) patients have hyperactive brain circuits (occipital, temporal and frontal lobes, and in cerebellum, thalamus, and periaqueductal gray)
  • The most important of these circuits is in the amygdala since it is the source of fear and panic
  • The amygdala mediates incoming stimuli from the environment (from thalamus and sensory cortex) and stored experiences (frontal cortex and hippocampus)
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2
Q

Hypoactive neurotransmitter circuits in GAD

A
  • Reduced functioning of GABAergic neurons (widely distributed in CNS) and serotonergic (5HT) neurons (arising from the dorsal raphe nucleus) are primarily responsible for GAD
  • Thus, there is a hyperactivity within the brain, primarily of noradrenergic neurons
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3
Q

Areas of inhibitory innervation in GAD

A
  • Hypofunctioning GABA neurons contributing to GAD found everywhere in CNS
  • The hypofunctioning 5HT neurons contributing to GAD arise in raphe nucleus and innervate the pre-frontal cortex and basal ganglia
  • Activity of descending 5HT neurons to brainstem is unaffected
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4
Q

Anxiolytics vs sedatives

A
  • Anxiolytics and antidepressants work in the amygdala, limbic system, and frontal cortex to reduce CNS activity (does not cause drowsiness) and anxiety
  • Sedatives: relax and induce drowsiness
  • Hyponotics: induce drowsiness and encourage sleep
  • Barbiturates/benzodiazepines can be sedatives and (if high dose) hypnotics
  • SSRIs and benzo’s are also anxiolytics
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5
Q

Anxiolytic drugs

A
  • Benzo’s (valium) are used for acute phase of anxiety, have a short time of onset (15-60 min)
  • SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are the 1st line of Rx for anxiety (especially long term)
  • SSRIs are much more benign than benzo’s, but their time of onset is 3 weeks to 2 months
  • 5HT1A agonists: Buspirone, causes activation of 5HT1A receptors, K efflux and thus hyper polarization (same overall effect as SSRIs)
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6
Q

Mechanism of action of benzo’s

A
  • BZs augment the effect of GABA neurons, by binding to a specific allosteric site of the GABA(A) receptor
  • By binding to this site, the BZ cause a change in conformation that lets the GABAA bind to GABA more effectively and frequently (increase receptor affinity)
  • When GABA binds to GABAA there is an inward flow of Cl through the receptor (ionotropic) into the cell and it is hyper polarized
  • Overall this causes CNS depression b/c there are more GABAA receptors binding to GABA w/ BZs
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7
Q

Subunits of different GABA receptors

A
  • BZs, barbiturates, and nonBZs (hypnotics) all work on the GABAA receptor (just bind to different sites/subunits)
  • The GABAA receptor can contain any combination of 5 isoforms of the following subunits: alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and rho
  • The specific subunits in the GABAA receptor confer functional diversity of the receptor
  • For example, for BZs to be functional the receptor must have a gamma subunit
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8
Q

BZs vs barbituates

A
  • Barbiturates are agonists of GABAA receptor
  • BZs are not agonists of GABAA, they are allosteric modulators of the receptor (increase the frequency and affinity of GABA binding)
  • Giving a pt BZs will reduce the concentration of GABA needed to activate the receptor, but will not increase the net effect of the receptor (no affect on current)
  • But giving a pt barbiturates not only decreases the GABA concentration required for GABAA activation, it also increases the current of Cl generated in the postsynaptic cell
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9
Q

5HT receptors and reuptake

A
  • Postsynaptic 5HT receptors (5HT1A) activate K channels via G proteins and cAMP
  • This causes K efflux and results in hypopolarization
  • SSRIs inhibit the reuptake transporter for serotonin (SERT), causing an elevated serotonin level in the synapse
  • The overall effect of SSRIs is to increase serotonergic activity (inhibition) and thus reduce CNS activity
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10
Q

Dose-dependent affects of BZs

A
  • At high doses (higher than doses for hypnotic effects) there may be general anesthesia
  • At even higher doses they may depress respiratory and vasomotor centers in medulla and lead to coma/death
  • Most metabolites for BZs (and all metabolites of SSRIs) are pharmacologically inactive
  • The BZs that produce active metabolites cause the T1/2 to be extended hours-days (due to the action of the metabolites)
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11
Q

Advantages of SSRIs over BZs for long-term Rx

A
  • Chronic use of BZs leads to adaptive changes, psychological dependence, acquired tolerance (not w/ SSRIs)
  • Chance of overdose w/ BZs especially w/ the ones that produce active metabolites (much less chance w/ SSRIs)
  • There are physical dependence and withdrawal symptoms (rebound anxiety, insomnia) w/ BZs (but not w/ SSRIs)
  • Withdrawal of BZs less severe when slow elimination or metabolites that are active (masks withdrawal symptoms)
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12
Q

Anxiety

A
  • An emotion that is different from fear in that the location of danger is intra-psychic for anxiety (outside the body for fear)
  • Fear and anxiety use the same physiological pathways
  • Anxiety is a healthy emotion that informs us about our surrounding and helps us respond accordingly
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13
Q

Pathological anxiety

A
  • Results when anxiety becomes too high or frequent
  • Inhibits normal functioning, is very closetful, and causes suffering
  • Leads to psychological problems, avoidance, underperformance, impaired self-care, contributes to medical illness (#1 risk factor for stroke), increased suicidal ideation
  • 50-80% of pts w/ anxiety disorder will eventually have major depression d/o
  • Genetic contribution to anxiety d/o is 25%
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14
Q

Manifestations of anxiety

A
  • Can manifest differently for each person and at different times
  • Anxiety Sx and Sx’s from other medical conditions can look identical
  • Physical and psychological Sx’s can originate from either psychological and/or biological causes
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15
Q

Anxiety pathways

A
  • Skeletal muscle, smooth muscle, and cognitive pathways

- The degree of severity of each pathway: skeletal < smooth < cognitive

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16
Q

Skeletal pathway

A
  • What we normally think of as anxiety
  • Tension in neck, shoulder, back, arms, hands, scalp, abdominal wall
  • Increased HR, BP, respiration
  • fidgeting in hands and legs
  • Dry mouth
  • Mediated by voluntary and sympathetic NS
17
Q

Smooth muscle pathway

A
  • Not recognized as anxiety
  • GI- nausea, diarrhea, vomiting
  • Urgency to urinate
  • Mediated by PsNS
18
Q

Cognitive pathway

A
  • Losing track of thoughts, poor memory, confusion dizziness, numbness
  • Visual and auditory changes
  • Most likely PsNS
19
Q

Appearance of anxiety

A
  • Not all ppl w/ anxiety appear as if they do
  • Some channel it thru a pathway we can’t see, others have defense mechanisms (unconscious) to avoid being overwhelmed
  • Anxiety in smooth muscle and cognitive pathways are particularly bad and must be identified
20
Q

DSM and anxiety

A
  • DSM provides criteria to Dx and specifiers to make a more accurate picture (specifiers do not Dx themselves)
  • Ex of specifier: Anxiety d/o w/ panic attacks
  • Panic attacks: a discreet period of intense fear/discomfort w/ 4 or more Sx’s that develop abruptly and reach a peak w/in 10 min (do not last much longer)
  • Notes: panic attacks are not a Dx, but a specifier
  • There is a panic d/o which has recurrent panic attacks as core feature
21
Q

Other types of anxiety 1

A
  • Specific phobia
  • Social anxiety (either performance type or generalized type)
  • Generalized anxiety d/o
  • Panic disorder (unexpected, recurrent attacks)
  • Agoraphobia: anxiety about 2 or more things (using public transportation, being in open or closed places, standing in line or being in a crowd, being outside of home alone)
22
Q

Other types of anxiety 2

A
  • Substance-induced anxiety
  • Anxiety d/o due to medical condition
  • OCD: obsessions are recurrent thoughts or urges or images, compulsions are repetitive behaviors or mental acts
  • Body dysmorphic d/o
  • Hoarding d/o
  • Trichotillomania: pulling out of hair
  • Excoriation d/o
  • Trauma and stressor d/o’s (acute stress d/o, PTSD, adjustment d/o)