Antianxiety Agents Flashcards

1
Q

Which drugs act on the GABA receptor?

A

Barbiturates

Benzos

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2
Q

Name a barbiturate

A

phenoBARBital

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3
Q

Name a benzodiazipine

A

diazepam, triazolam, alprazolam, clonazepam,
midazolam

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4
Q

Name a benzodiazipine receptor agonist

A

zolpidem, eszopiclone

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5
Q

Name a benzo receptor antagonist

A

flumazenil

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6
Q

Name a Melatonin congener

A

ramalteon

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7
Q

Name a 5-HT1a (minor, α1, α2, D2) receptor agonist
**Non-sedative Anxiolytic: **

A

buspirone

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8
Q

Compare a sedative with a hypnotic

A

Sedative: drug causing a calming effect;
tranquilizer

Hypnotic: sleep-inducing or promoting drug

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9
Q

As dose increases, can produce sleep (=“hypnosis”), anesthesia, coma and death. When do you get anxiolytic & sedative effects?

A

Low doses

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10
Q

True/false: Benzodiazepines require proportionately **much higher **doses to produce anesthesia, coma or death—only do so in combination w/ other sedatives.

A

TRUE

much “safer”

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11
Q

True/false: Antidepressants are the drug of choice for panic disorder. (also agoraphobia)

A

True

SSRIs most common; others also effective but have more adverse effects.

**Alprazolam effective but can cause rebound anxiety when discontinued; risk of dependence.

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12
Q

Social phobia** can be treated with **clonazepam

A

ALSO behavioral therapy*; also SSRIs, other
ADDs; Beta blockers used to suppress tremors and shaking.

*TOC for specific phobias

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13
Q

What is the principle treatment for generalized anxiety disorders?

A

principal treatment is benzodiazepines; also buspirone; some ADDs.

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14
Q

Which drug has the following MOA:

bind to sites on GABA receptor
• enhance duration of GABA-mediated chloride flux
• cause **hyperpolarization of neuron = **neuronal inhibition
• at higher concentrations, directly open GABA Cl- channel
• Suppress glutamate transmission via AMPA receptors
• Direct membrane effects to inhibit neurons

A

Barbiturates and older sedatives

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15
Q

What are three main concerns with barbiturates?

A

Relatively low therapeutic index—dangerous in overdose
• High incidence of dependence and addiction
• Barbiturates induce CYP enzymes

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16
Q

What are two current uses of barbiturates?

A

For anesthesia; anesthetic induction: thiopental

For seizure disorders: phenobarbital

17
Q

Which drug has the following MOA?

  • *bind to sites on GABA receptor
  • EFFECT:to facilitate GABA mediated Cl- influx**
  • cause hyperpolarization of neuron = neuronal inhibition
A

Benzodiazipines

Differences from barbiturates:

  • NO DIRECT EFFECT: Can’t directly open channel (no effect w/o presence of GABA)—this limits their toxicity!
  • Only one binding site per receptor
  • Don’t act on all subtypes of GABA receptors
18
Q

How do full benzo agonists work?

A

(e.g. diazepam, alprazolam, zolpidem,
etc
.): bind to BZ receptor, enhance GABA channel opening, Cl- influx

*Hypnotics like zolpidem selective for BZ receptors on α1 subunit

19
Q

How does a benzo antagonist work?

A

_ (flumazenil)_ – competitively binds to BZ
receptor but does not change GABA effects
• No effects when given alone
• Will competitively inhibit effects of both full agonists (BZs), hypnotics like zolpidem, and inverse agonists

20
Q

What are some systemic effects of benzos?

A

Sedation

* higher doses cause cognitive impairment (anterograde amnesia)
- “Disinhibition”
Amnesia (useful for anesthetic use)

21
Q

What are the main respiratory effects of benzos?

A

Significant respiratory depression w/ pulmonary disease; also in children
Contraindicated (as are all sedatives) w/ o_bstructive sleep apnea_

22
Q

True/false: you can develop tolerance with benzos.

A

TRUE

Symptoms: anxiety, insomnia, irritability, CNS excitability, seizures

23
Q

What are the levels of dependence in benzos and barbiturates?

A
  • Barbiturates have high riskschedule II
  • BZs: much lower but still some risk of
    psychological dependence; schedule III or IV
24
Q

How do the benzos differ in kinetics?

A

Rate of entry into CNS: more lipophilic enter CNS faster
• Fast entry useful for anesthesia (midazolam)
• Others entering faster: alprazolam & diazepam
Rapid absorption and rapid CNS entry associated w/
higher abuse liability (esp. alprazolam & diazepam)

25
Q

Compare the duration of action of benzos

A

• Most long-acting (t1/2 ≥ 12-24 hrs)

diazepam, clonazepam

• Medium duration (t1/2 6-12 hrs):

alprazolam

• Short duration (t1/2 < 6 hrs):

triazolam, midazolam

26
Q

How does flumazenil work?

A
  • *• Reverses most effects of BZs**
  • Useful in BZ overdose, & to hasten recovery after use in surgery*

• Rapid acting but short
duration (30-60 min) – must
give repeated doses to reverse
OD (i.v. only)

• Does NOT work against
alcohol or barbiturates

27
Q

How does buspirone work?

A

No sedative, hypnotic, anti-seizure or euphoric effects

  • Partial agonist at CNS 5-HT1a receptors
    • Not useful for acute anxiety; efficacy requires 1+ weeks
28
Q

What is the major advantage of buspirone?

A

ADVANTAGES: no tolerance, dependence or abuse liability

29
Q

How is Ramelteon used?

A
  • *Synthetic agonist acting at MT1 & MT2 melatonin receptors;**
  • no activity at GABA receptors*
  • FDA-approved for long-term use for insomnia
30
Q

Which benzos are used as sleep aids?

A

Benzodiazepine Receptor Agonists (BRAs)
• Zolpidem, zaleplon, eszopiclone (“Z” drugs)

All suppress REM and deep sleep

Guidelines suggest limiting BZ use for up to 3 weeks

31
Q

How do the BRAs work?

A

Bind to a subset of GABA
receptors: those w/ α1 subunit

• Effects reversed by flumazenil

NO anxiolytic, anticonvulsant or
muscle relaxing activity

32
Q

What are the major safety announcements with zolpidem?

A
  • known risk of next-morning impairment
  • should not drive or
    engage in other activities that require complete mental alertness

January 2013 Drug Safety Communication: The recommended initial dose of certain immediate-release zolpidem products (Ambien and Edluar) is
5 mg for women and either 5 mg or 10 mg for men.