Exam 4 - Lecture 37, Muscarinic antagonists and neuromuscular junction blockers Flashcards

1
Q

major classes of cholinoreceptor antagonist

A

Muscarinic antagonist

Neuromuscular, nAChR blockers (Depolarizing and non-depolarizing)

ganglion blockers (little clinical use)

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2
Q

M1 receptor

A

CNS, ANS pre- and postganglic neurons

Coupled to Gaq

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3
Q

M2 receptor

A

Myocardium, smooth muscle (SM), some neurons

Coupled to Gai

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4
Q

M3 receptor

A

common on effector cells (glandular and SM)

Coupled to Gaq

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5
Q

M4 & M5

A

Least prominent subtypes, CNS > PNS

M4 = Gai and M5 = Gaq

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6
Q

Atropine

A

MoA:
Competitive antagonist of M1-5 receptors

Medical Applications:
can treat bradycardia, reduce saliva during surgery, Used for OOP poisoning, mydriatic in othalmology, IV atropine effective within minutes and lasts 30-60min, effect on central M receptors reduces Parkinsonian tremors

Side effects:
Tachycardiac, dry mouth, mydriasis, urinary retention and constipaton, crosses BBB

OD:
Antidote if physostigmine or pilocarpine

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7
Q

Paradoxical effect of low dose atropine

A

At low doses, atropine decreases heart rate because it inhibits presynaptic M2 receptors. It preferentially activates presynaptic receptors

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8
Q

Atropine as inverse agonist

A

Atropine is a ACh-antagonist, but its effects go beyond simple opposition of ACh, therefore its an inverse agonist

M2 receptor has a baseline activity, and atropine bring its below that

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9
Q

Scopolamine, Hyoscine

“Devils death” street name

A

Medical use:
motion sickness and postoperative nausea
GI-spasm, biliary spasm and IBS
can do IM,SC or transdermal

side effects:
Similar to atropine, less severe

Overdose: treat with physostigmine

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10
Q

Glycopyrronoum or (glycopyrrolate)

A

Muscarinic antagonist

FDA approved for excessive sweating and peptic ulcers

Most commonly used with neostigmine during reversal of a NM blockade to mitigate side effects of neostigmine, such as bradycardia and reflect hypertension

side effects:
similar to atropine but does not cross BBB

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11
Q

Activation of nAChRs

A

depolarizes skeletal muscles

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12
Q

Activation of Nav1.4 channels

A

initiates and propagates action potentials

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13
Q

3 types of neuromuscular blockers

A

Nondepolarizing

Depolarizing

Inhibitors of ACh release

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14
Q

Nondepolarizing

A

Antagonists that prevent the action of ACh (agonist) on nAChRs by occupying the receptor binding site

Ex. Rocuronium

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15
Q

Depolarizing

A

Agonists that have a longer half-life at the nAChR than ACh, leading to sustained depolarization of the muscle and inactivation of Nav channels causing phase 1 block

Ex. Succinylcholine

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16
Q

Inhibitors of ACh release

A

ex. Botox

Peptide toxins that prevent the Neurotransmitter vesicle machinery from releasing ACh into the synaptic cleft

17
Q

Tubocurarine

A

naturally occurring

causes slow skeletal muscle paralysis and histamine release

Minimal medical utility because it also acts at ganglia, modern compounds safer

Can be used to reduce painful neurotransmitter release following a-latrotoxin envenomation (black widow)

18
Q

Tubocurarine

A

naturally occurring

causes slow skeletal muscle paralysis and histamine release

Minimal medical utility because it also acts at ganglia, modern compounds safer

Can be used to reduce painful neurotransmitter release following a-latrotoxin envenomation (black widow)

19
Q

Cisatracurium besilate

A

** Not reversed by sugammadex **, use neostigmine

Non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocker

Derived from atracurium

Facilitates placement of endotracheal tubes and relaxes skeletal muscle in surgery

Hoffmann elimination, temp and plasma pH dependent, therefore increased temp speeds elimination

Adverse effects:
Hypotension and reflex tachycardia

20
Q

Rocuronium

A

** Reversed using sugammadex **

designed to be less potent than pancuronium

aminosteroid non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocker

facilitate tracheal intubation and relax skeletal muscle

used for euthanasia/lethal injection w/ midazolam

21
Q

Pancuronium

A

** Reversed using sugammadex **

Curare mimic based on 2 ACh molecules, partially reversal w/ neostigmine

aminosteroid non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocker

facilitate tracheal intubation and relax skeletal muscle

used for euthanasia/lethal injection w/ midazolam

22
Q

Cisatrucurium vs Atracurium

A

Longer duration

23
Q

Pancuronium vs Rocuronium

A

Longer lasting, more potent

24
Q

Sugammadex (Bridion)

A

FDA approved in 2015, EU 2008

Reverses NMJ block by chelating amino steroid drugs

Alternative to neostigmine and glycopyrrolate

Can theoretically chelate other polar steroids, including oral contraceptives

25
Q

Succinylcholine

A

Activator of nAChRs, depolarizing NM blocker

Similarly fast onset but faster recovery than rocuronium

Paralytic for general anesthesia or ECT

Degraded by serum butrylChE not AChE

Side effects:
constipation (treat w/ neostigmine)
Hyperkalemia (lead to K+ wasting and cardiac arrest in susceptible patients)
Ocular hypertension
Malignant hyperthermia (v low probability; treat with dantrolene)

26
Q

Depolarizing agents can have two phases of block

A

Phase 1: (Goal)
Nicotine depolarizes the membrane and spontaneous action potentials are lost in response to Orthodromic electrode or Antidromic electrode. The neuron is refractory to electrical activity due to inactivation of NaV channels

Phase 2:
In continued presence of agonist, the cell depolarizes and is electrically excitable BUT is unresponsive to Orthodromic electrode because the nAChRs are desensitized

27
Q

Phase 1 block: Inactivation of Nav Channels

Succinylcholine

A
  1. Succinylcholine binds to the ACh binding site, opening nAChR channels
  2. This depolarizes the skeletal muscle, activates Nav, Cav and K+ channels
  3. Fasciculation (muscle twitches/spontaneous contractions) often observed prior to paralysis
  4. nAChRs desensitize and the muscle is refractory to further stimulation (The membrane remains depolarized so Nav channels are inactivated)
  5. T1/2 of Succinylcholine in synapse&raquo_space; ACh so effect is maintained
28
Q

Low conc of Succinylcholine….

A

limits downward channel openings

29
Q

High Conc of Succinylcholine…

A

causes flickering of the channel as the pore opens and is repeatedly blocked

30
Q

Phase I vs Phase II

A

Phase I:

Much faster recovery

31
Q

Botulinum toxin (Botox) mechanism

A
  1. Release of ACh mediated by SNARE protein complex
  2. During depolarization Ca2+ influx facilitates conformational changes that allow vesicle fusion
  3. Fusion and release of ACh; disassembly of machinery
  4. First internalization step of Botox is unknown. Toxin has light and heavy chains
  5. BoTox internalized into vesicles, Lc released
  6. Lc cleaves SNARE proteins, preventing assembly of the fusion complex and blocking release of ACh
32
Q

Botox

A

Prevents release of ACh onto NMJs

Its one of most potent toxins, 1.5ng/kg IV

Medical use:
Muscle spasm, excessive sweating, migraine, neuropathic pain and cosmetic smoothing of skin wrinkles