CPTP 3.19 Neuropharmacology 4 Drugs for neurodegenerative disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Dementing disorders and Parkinson’s disease are examples of what?

A

Neurodegenerative disorders

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2
Q

Describe the following pathologies of Alzheimer’s:

1) Macro
2) Micro
3) Chemical

A

1) Atrophy of brain areas. Ventricular enlargement.
2) 𝛽-amyloid plaques. Neurofibrillary tau-protein tangles. Neuronal loss.
3) Synaptophysin loss. Cortical cholinergic, NA and 5-HT loss

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3
Q

Where is atrophy seen in Alzheimer’s?

A
  • Hippocampus
    • Entorhinal cortex
    • Temporal cortex
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4
Q

How is acetylcholine generated in cholinergic neurones?

A
  • Choline is taken up by cells

* Choline acetyltransferase creates acetyl choline, taking the acetate group from acetyl CoA

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5
Q

Why is increasing the amount of available choline not a viable method of enhancing cholinergic neurotransmission?

A

Choline availability is not the rate-limiting step, as only 1% of plasma choline is synthesised into ACh

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6
Q

Which class of drugs is the main class used to treat dementia? Name the formulary examples

A

Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
• Donepezil
• Rivastigmine
• Galantamine

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7
Q

What other target is affected by some acetylcholinesterases?

A

Butyrylcholinesterase (pseudocholinesterase)

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8
Q

What are the side effects of acetylcholinesterase?

A
  • Bradycardia
    • GI complaints
    • Sleep disturbance
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9
Q

Why is tacrine (an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor) no longer on the market?

A

It has severe liver toxicity

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10
Q

Which acetylcholinesterase inhibitor has the longest half life?

A

Donepezil (70 hours)

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11
Q

Which acetylcholinesterase inhibitor is given as a transdermal patch?

A

Rivastigmine

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12
Q

Which acetylcholinesterase inhibitor also acts as a nicotinic receptor agonist?

A

Galantamine

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13
Q

What class of drug is effective as an adjunct to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors? Name an example and explain why it works.

A

NMDA antagonists
• Memantine
• Prevents glutamate excitotoxicity

NB: not very effective on its own

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14
Q

Outline the 𝛽-amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer’s.

A
  • 𝛽 amyloid is synthesised from amyloid precursor protein (APP) by 𝛽-secretase (beta) and 𝛾-secretase (gamma) (the ‘nasty’ secretases which cause Alzheimer’s, not the ‘nice’ 𝛼 (alpha) ones)
    • 𝛽-amyloid plaques are layed down which leads to abnormal tau proteins, causing tangles
    • This all leads to inflammation, neurodegeneration and cell death
    • This cell death eventually leads to dementia
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15
Q

How might Alzheimer’s be prevented in the future?

A

Prevention of the formation of plaques by using 𝛽-secretase or 𝛾-secretase inhibitors

𝛽-amyloid vaccines

Lithium blocks the hyperphosphorylation of Tau

Argenase inhibitors

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16
Q

Briefly recall the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease

A
  • Bradykinesia
    • Muscular rigidity
    • Resting tremor
    • Stiff posture

Emotional and cognitive:
• Slower thought
• Depression

17
Q

What causes Parkinson’s symptoms

A

80% depletion of dopaminergic neurotransmission in the nigrostriatal pathway

This leads to an imbalance between dopamine and ACh in the striatum, causing motor dysfunction

18
Q

How can Parkinsonism be treated

A

Reestablish good balance between ACh and dopamine levels in the striatum by:
• Increasing dopaminergic transmission
• Decreasing cholinergic transmission

19
Q

Describe the neuronal synthesis of dopamine and noradrenaline

A
  • Tyrosine is taken up by the cell
    • This is converted into L-DOPA by tyrosine hydroxylase
    • This is converted to Dopamine by DOPA decarboxylase

(NB: dopamine can then be converted into noradrenaline, another catecholamine, by dopamine-beta-hydroxylase)

20
Q

How would tyrosine supplementation effect Parkinson’s and why?

A

No effect because tyrosine hydroxylase is the rate limiting step of dopamine synthesis, and so is saturated with tyrosine already

21
Q

Why is L-DOPA supplementation alone for Parkinson’s treatment not effective?

How is this worked around?

What is the resulting drug?

A
  • 70% of L-DOPA gets metabolised in the gut, 29% in the periphery
    • The periphery uses L-DOPA to create more dopamine and Noradrenaline
    • This means high doses must be given to have an effect on the nigrostriatal pathway
    • This creates a lot of sympathetic side effects

To work around this, L-DOPA is combine with a peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor (which doesn’t cross the BBB) which blocks gut and periphery metabolism so that a greater proportion of L-DOPA reaches the brain

Co-careldopa (levodopa and carbidopa combination)
• Carbidopa = peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor

22
Q

Co-careldopa triple therapy may also include what?

A

catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitors (this enzyme breaks down L-DOPA too)

23
Q

What drugs are available for Parkinson’s? Explain each.

A

INCREASING DOPAMINE FUNCTION:

D1 and D2 agonist
• Apomorphine
• Bromocriptine

L-DOPA supplementation
• Co-careldopa (carbidopa and levodopa combination)
• Carbidopa is a peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor

Catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitors
• Entacapone
• Given with co-careldopa as a triple therapy

Monoamine oxidase B inhibitors
• Selegiline

DECREASING ACH FUNCTION:

Anticholinergic drugs