Exam 2 Lecture 19, Anti-PD II Flashcards

1
Q

L-DOPA + Carbidopa

A

Drugs which increase dopamine synthesis in brain

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2
Q

Decrease DA metabolism, prolong DA effect

A

MAO inhibitors: selegeline (deprenyl) and rasagiline

COMT inhibitors: Tolcapone and entacapone

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3
Q

Stimulate DA receptors (DA agonists)

A

D2 agonist: bromocriptine

D2/D3 agonist: pramipexole, ropinirole, rotigotine

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4
Q

Block muscarinic receptors, re-establish DA/Ach balance

A

benztropine mesylate
trihexiphenidyl
procyclidine

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5
Q

Increase DA synthesis or release

A

amantidine

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6
Q

Treat Parkinson’s disease psychosis

A

pimavanserin

over activation of D2 = psychosis…since D2 agonists used to treat Parkinson’s it can lead to psychosis.

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7
Q

Levodopa (L-Dopa)

A

Dopamine has poor BBB penetration thus L-DOPA

converted to DA by L-AAAD

Given with Carbidopa to prevent being metabolized in peripheral system. Carbidopa is a peripherally active decarboxylase inhibitor…doesnt enter brain

Alleviates all clinical symptoms of PD

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8
Q

Sinemet

A

Combo carbidopa: L-DOPA in 1:10 or 1:4 ratio

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9
Q

Levodopa Side effects (short term)

A

Gastrointestinal
Cardiovascular
Behavioral - anxiety, depression, delusions, hallucinations

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10
Q

Levodopa Limitations long-term use

A
Loss of response
Induction of involuntary movements (dyskinesias)
"Freezing" episodes
"on-off" fluctuations
Parkinson's disease psychosis
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11
Q

Drug Holidays

A

may cause acute, dramatic worsening of parkinsonian symptoms, but drug can usually be reinstated at lower dose with better control of symptoms afterward

ie T break

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12
Q

Strategy behind L-DOPA + carbidopa combo

A

by using carbidopa, prevents L-DOPA from being turned into DA in the peripheral system so you need less of a dose to get a greater effect in the brain.

Without carbidopa 1-3%, with carbidopa 10%

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13
Q

Selegiline

A

selective MAO-B inhibitor (MAO-B metabolizes DA but NOT NE, 5-HT)

Used in combination with L-DOPA for its ability to breakdown of DA, thereby prolonging L-DOPA effect

Drug was thought to slow progression of Parkinson’s disease by preventing formation of neurotoxic species like MPP+ (MAO-B plays role) but not supported in clinical studies

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14
Q

Rasagiline

A

Selective, irreversible MAO-B inhibitor approved in 2006

Used as monotherapy in early PD, in adjunct with L-DOPA in later stages….reduces “off time” and increases “on time”

Once daily, well-tolerated

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15
Q

Tolcapone

A

Selective COMT inhibitor

Used in combination with L-DOPA + carbidopa to inhibit peripheral L-DOPA metabolism so that more reaches the brain

Therapeutic benefit: may prevent end-of-dose wearing off and fluctuations in efficacy due to L-DOPA pharmacokinetics; extends “on time”

WARNING ISSUED NOV 1998: drug associated with hepatic injury and liver failure

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16
Q

Entacapone

A

Newer selective COMT inhibitor without hepatoxicity problem of tolcapone

reduces peripheral O-methylation of L-DOPA so that more reaches brain, reduces end of dose wearing off

Shorter ~2 hours duration of action

17
Q

Bromocriptine (Parlodel)

A

D2 selective DA agonist

Reserved for patients with “on/off” symptoms caused long-term L-DOPA

used in combo with L-DOPA at sub maximal doses of each

Side effects (hallucinations, postural hypotension) similar to L-DOPA

Causes nausea and fatigue upon starting therapy, increase dose to minimize problem

Used to treat hyperprolactinemia caused by prolactin-secreting tumors of the pituitary

18
Q

Pramipexole (Mirapex)

A

D3 agonist, non-ergot agonist at D2 like family of DA receptors

more widely used than ergot derivatives, can be used with or without L-DOPA and useful all stages PD

Generally well-tolerated, therapy can be started more quickly than ergots but still same side effects

Side effects: sleep attacks, compulsive behaviors

Approved for treatment of RLS

19
Q

Ropinirole (Requip)

A

non-ergot D2 like receptor agonist

used as initial therapy early PD, or with L-DOPA late state, similar to pramipexole

Side effects: nausea, hallucinations, sleep attacks

Also approved for RLS treatment

20
Q

Rotigotine (Neupro)

A

New non-ergo D3/D2/D1 agonist

Administered transdermally

Continuous delivery for 24hrs

Side effects: postural hypotension, nausea, sleep attacks, hallucinations

21
Q

Anticholinergic drugs

A

Muscarinic receptor antagonists

Benzotropine mesylate (Cogentin)
Trihexyphenidyl (Artane)
Procyclidine (Kemadrin)
Diphenhydramine (Benadryl)

22
Q

Anticholinergic Drug info

A

Block effects of ACh in striatum, restoring balance between DA and ACh

Modest anti-parkinsonian action, improve tremor and rigidity

Useful in early stages of disease, sometimes used in combo

Side effects: Peripheral antimuscarinic effects like dry mouth, blurred vision. CNS effects

23
Q

Amantadine

A

Antiviral found to have antiparkinson effects

May increase DA synthesis and or release from surviving neurons. Interacts NMDA receptor

Less effective than L-DOPA, more effective anticholinergics

Effectiveness modest and short lived so used in early stage or intermittently with other drugs

side effects mild and readily reversible once stop drug

ER form released for levodopa induced dyskinesia, taken at bedtime, reduces symptoms

24
Q

Pimavanserin (Nuplazid)

A

Approved 2016 to treat hallucinations and delusions associated with Parkinson’s disease psychosis without worsening motor symptoms

Acts as inverse agonist/antagonist at 5HT2A…..does not block D2 receptors

25
Q

Tissue Transplantation

A

DA cell grafts into corpus striatum

Involves transplantation of substantia infra tissue from aborted human fetus, not widely adopted form of therapy

Major impediments: poor survival of cells, need large amount of fetal tissue and immunosuppressant therapy, ethical issues

26
Q

Surgical lesions

A

goal to prevent excessive inhibition of motor neurons

27
Q

Pallidotomy (Surgical Lesions)

A

ablation of globes pallidus interns, GPi.

Prevents excessive inhibition of thalamus, performed in US with apparently high success rate

Controversial, but in demand…how long does it work for?

28
Q

Autografts

A

involve surgical removal of cells capable of making dopamine from the patient and surgically injecting them into the striatum of same patient

been performed using adrenal medulla cells, but cells did not reliably release dopamine or improve Parkinson’s disease

29
Q

Deep brain stimulation

A

stimulation of sub thalamic nucleus (STN) or GPi via chronically implanted electrodes

Believe to quite STN, lessen its “drive” of GPi, and prevent excessive inhibition of thalamus. Can also implant directly into GPi

Highly effective therapy without risks of creating new brain lesion (safer than pallidotomy). Can be programmed to deliver titrated stimulus

30
Q

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)

A

Health DA neurons cultured and grafted into midbrain to restore DA transmission

iPSCs derived from already differentiated somatic cells, can be differentiated into DA neuron via transcription factors and used for grafting

Rodent model showed it can reverse Parkinsonism.

Used to use embryonic stem cells, but iPSCs more ethical

31
Q

COMT inhibitors

A

Tolcapone and entacapone

32
Q

MAO inhibitors

A

selegeline (deprenyl) and rasagiline

33
Q

D2 agonist

A

Bromocriptine

34
Q

D3/D2 agonist

A

Pramipexole
Ropinirole
Rotigotine