Term
what is the butyrophenone antipsychotic? |
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Definition
**haloperidol (high potency) |
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Term
what is the phenylbutyl-piperidine antipsychotic? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the phenothiazine antipsychotics? |
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Definition
aliphatics (low potency): **chlorpromazine, promazine, triflupromazine. piperazines (high potency): pimozidefluphenazine, *prochlorperazine, trifluoperazine. piperidines (low potency): mesoridazine, piperacetazine, thioridazine. |
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Term
what is the thioxanthine antipsychotic? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the atypical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
aripiprazole, risperidone, paliperidone, ziprasidone, zonisamide, and the dibenzepines: *clozapine, loxapine, *olanzapine, quetiapine |
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Term
what is the MOA for the typical antipsychotic agents? |
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Definition
1) alpha adrenergic blockade [antisympathetic - ADRs: vasodilation, postural hypotension, etc]. 2) anticholinergic blockade at M1 (CNS), M2 (CV), and M3 (smooth muscle) sites [antiparasympathetic - ADRs: mydriasis, dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention, tachycardia - more common w/low potency [LP] agents - require higher dose]. 3) antihistaminic: H-1 blockade. 4) hypothermic [will reduce normal body temperature]. 5) D2 dopamine blockade [schizophrenia is thought to be due to hyperactivity of central dopaminergic systems (converted to homovanillic acid in CSF which can then reach plasma), esp the mesolimbic]. |
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Term
what are the typical antipsychotic agents indicated for? |
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Definition
psychosis, acute mania, organic mental syndromes (delirium, dementia), severe anxiety unresponsive to other drugs, ballismus, alcoholic hallucinosis, antiemetic (phenothiazines and butyrophenones), gilles de la tourettes syndrome, huntington's, intractable hiccough (promethazine, methdilazine, trimeprazine), and extensive pruritus |
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Term
what characterizes the effect of the typical antipsychotics on psychosis? |
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Definition
*improvement in: anorexia, combativeness, delusions, hallucinations, hostility, hyperactivity, insomnia, negativism. *lack of improvement in: insight, judgment, memory. acutely: efficacy may occur in 1-2 days. chronically: several weeks of drug administration my be required w/progressive dosing. |
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Term
what ANS ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? (*know these*) |
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Definition
blurred vision, mydriasis, dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention, tachycardia (anticholinergic actions more likely w/LP agents). |
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Term
what endocrine ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
amenorrhea, galactorrhea (increased milk production due to increased prolactin - normally inhibited by DA, avoid in breast CA pts), gynecomastia (DA blockade), inhibition of ejaculation (w/o erection interference), wt gain (common w/atypical drugs). |
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Term
what CV ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
hypotension (orthostatic), reflex tachycardia, EKG abnormalities (more likely w/LP agents). *hypersensitivity: skin rash, gray/blue skin discoloration, jaundice, photosensitivity . |
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Term
what CNS ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
sedation, confusion, drowsiness, EPRs (avoid these drugs in geriatric pts). |
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Term
what early onset EPR (extrapyramidal reaction) ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
early onset EPRs: akathisia (uncontrollable motor restlessness in the lower extremities), dystonia/torticollis (muscle spasms of face, tongue, neck + trismus [lock jaw]), parkinson-like syndrome (akinesia, bradykinesia, suffling gait, resting tremor). these are most frequent w/high potency (HP) derivatives piperazines (trifluoperazine) and butyrophenones (haloperidol) in children and geriatric pts. tx options: reduce dose, change to LP agent, and pharmacotherapy (anticholinergic, DA agonist [amantadine]). as more D2 receptors are blocked - EPRs increase. |
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Term
what late onset EPR (extrapyramidal reaction) ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
late onset EPRs: *tardive dyskinesia (TD), repetitive involuntary movements of the jaw, lips, tongue (may involve neck/trunk) which cease while the pt sleeps. any type of neuroleptic agent can induce TD, which is possibly related to compensatory increases in DA activity w/in the CNS due to blockade. this may remain after drug termination, therefore antipsychotics should be used conservatively and discontinued if TD appears. *neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS), more common w/HP antipyschotics, characterized by catatonia/tremor/ANS instability (hyperthermia). fatal in 10% of pts - but w/monitoring, rapid d/c of offending drug and rapid initiation of tx (bromocriptine, dantrolene: antepyretic), fatality risk is low. *seizures. *pseudodepression. |
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Term
what hematologic ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
leukocytosis, leukopenia, agranulocytosis (lower risk w/chlorpromazine, higher risk w/clozapine - patients should be monitored weekly) |
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Term
what genital ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
priapism: painful, prolonged (congestion/swelling) penile erection which does not result from sexual desire - rather failure of detumescence (dysregulation of ANS). this is considered a urologic emergency b/c if not treated w/in 4-6 hrs = fibrosis/permanent impotence. not dose related or related to duration of tx, may be related to alpha-1 adrenergic blocking activity (agonists are tx) and higher rates are seen w/thioridazine/chlorpromazine (LP agents). tx: ice pack, alpha 1 adrenergic agonists, and decompressive sx. |
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Term
what ocular ADRs are associated w/the typical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the MOA for the atypical antipsychotic agents? |
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Definition
increased blockade of the 5HT-2A (serotonin) receptor vs the D2 receptor |
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Term
is there a risk in treating elderly pts w/dementia-related psychosis w/any antipsychotics? |
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Definition
yes - there is an increased mortality rate, due apparently to CV or infectious etiology |
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Term
what are the common atypical antipsychotics? |
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Definition
clozapine, risperidone, paliperidone, pimozide |
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Term
what characterizes clozapine? MOA? |
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Definition
first atypical antipsychotic, developed to reduce the incidence of EPR, but major problem is increased agranulocytosis. like typical antipsychotics it blocks D2 receptors (but weakly) as well as blocking M1/2/3 receptors and alpha 1/2 adrenergic receptors. however, it is **also a D1 antagonist and 5HT-2A antagonist - *but does not produce parkinsonism. |
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Term
what characterizes management of clozapine in terms of agranulocytosis? |
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Definition
clozapine requires a weekly CBC. if mild leukopenia (3000-3500 WBC/mm3), the CBC needs to be performed 2x/week. if leukopenia (<3000 WBC/mm3 or <1500 granulocytes/mm3), immediate d/c. if agranulocystosis (<1000 WBC/mm^3 or <500 granulocytes/mm^3), the pt can never receive clozapine again. |
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Term
what CNS ADRs are associated w/clozapine? |
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Definition
confusion, sedation, seizures (higher rate than w/other antipyschotics, mostly grand-mal [tonic-clonic], carbamazepine is effective). prolonged psychotic relapse is also a potential risk following abrupt withdrawal. |
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Term
what characterizes risperidone? |
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Definition
high affinity: blockade of alpha 1/2 adrenergic, H-1, and 5HT-2A > D2 receptors. moderate-low affinity: D-1, 5HT-1A, 5HT-1C, 5HT-1D. does not interact w/cholinergic or beta receptors. claims less EPRs than clozapine (poss. due to 5HT-2 block > D-2 block). biotransformed by CYP to active metabolite (9-OH-risperidone; **paliperidone) in t1/2 hrs, which then has a t1/2 of 21 hrs = potential drug interactions, and necessity for decreased dose in geriatri/hepatic/renally impaired pts. ADRs: orthostatic hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and tardive dyskinesia. |
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Term
what characterizes paliperidone? |
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Definition
this active metabolite of risperidone is used in schizophrenia tx (PO/IM), but not dementia-related psychosis. ADRs: EPRs, tachycardia, orthostatic hypotension, sleepiness. |
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Term
how do clozapine and olanzapine compare in terms of t1/2, D2 %, 5HT-2A %, pos/neg symp, depol block, and ADRs? |
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Definition
*clozapine: t1/2: 10 hrs, D2%: 15-60, 5HT%: 80-90, 2+pos, 1+ neg, depol block: meso-limbic, ADRs: agranulocystosis, wt gain. *olanzapine: t1/2: 31 hrs, D2%: 60, 5HT%: 0, 1+pos, 1+ neg, depol block: meso-limbic, ADRs: wt gain. (pos symp: hallucinations, delusions, reality distortions, neg symp: anhedonia, social withdrawal) |
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Term
what is the risk w/5HT-2A > > D-2? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
agonist at H-1 ≈ sedation |
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Term
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Definition
blocks reuptake of NE and DA – useful in assoc. depression |
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Term
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Definition
reserved for treatment of motor and phonic tics in patients with tourette's syndrome - indicated when other tx has failed or tics are severe. ADRs are the same as other neuroleptics |
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Term
what characterizes the antimanic drugs? |
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Definition
lithium is the mainstay. it does not have any specific CNS depressant effect, just a "mood stabilizing effect". t1/2: 20-24 hrs, onset of therapeutic effect: 6-10 days. it is the DOC for bipolar disorder but may also be used for acute mania, prevention of mania/depression, alcoholism if 2/2 to primary mood disorder, and aggressive behavior. |
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Term
what is the safe therapeutic plasma range for lithium? (know this) |
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Definition
0.75 - 1.25 mEq/L - usually achieved by 900 mg/daily (blood sample drawn right before AM dose: usually 12 hrs after PM dose [plasma levels most stable before dosing] -> 2x/wk @ initiation, 1x/2 mos for stable pts). depletion of Na+ (diuretics, diarrhea) can cause greater retention of Li+ and lead to ADRs. however, in heavy sweating, Li+ may be secreted > Na+. toxic reactions can occur at levels below 1.0 mEq/L. |
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Term
what ADRs are associated w/Li+ at mild intoxication (> 1.5 mEq/L)? |
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Definition
ataxia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, n/v, small tremors, sedation, tinnitus |
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Term
what ADRs are associated w/Li+ at mod intoxication (1.5 -> 2.5 mEq/L) to severe intoxication (> 2.5 mEq/L)? |
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Definition
CNS: confusion---> coma---> death, respiratory depression, major tremors/EPS, seizures. CV: arrhythmias, hypotension. other: decreased thyroid function, wt gain, edema, polyuria, polydipsia, possible kidney damage (monitoring of serum creatinine if > 1.6 mg/dL), and metallic taste. |
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Term
what drug interactions are associated w/Li+? |
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Definition
increased Li+ concentrations by: **thiazide diuretics > loop diuretics (e.g., furosemide), ACE Inhibitors, NSAIDs (e.g., indomethacin) but apparently not by ASA or acetaminophen. |
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Term
what anticonvulsants have been used off label for mania tx? |
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Definition
carbamezepine, clonazepam, valproic acid, gabapentin, lamotrigine, and topiramate. |
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Term
what characterizes the use of carbamezepine (anticonvulsant) as an antipsychotic? |
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Definition
efficacy similar to lithium in both treatment of acute mania and prophylaxis of bipolar disorder. superior in more severe mania, rapid cyclers, pts w/o fam hx of mania. it induces its own biotranformation - may need to increase dosage after a week. |
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Term
what characterizes the use of clonazepam (anticonvulsant) as an antipsychotic? |
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Definition
this is shown to have efficacy in the first week (early) tx of acute mania and is less effective in prophylaxis of bipolar. |
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Term
what characterizes the use of valproic acid (anticonvulsant) as an antipsychotic? |
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Definition
significant antimanic action occurs within 1 to 4 days following establishment of therapeutic serum levels (same as for epilepsy: 8-12 ug/mL). |
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Term
what characterizes the use of topiramate/lamotrigine/gabapentin (anticonvulsants) as an antipsychotics? |
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Definition
clinical evidence for efficacy of these anticonvulsants is more impressive for *acute mania than for long-term maintenance of bipolar disorder. some investigations indicate particular effectiveness of lamotrigine in bipolar depression. currently, other than for valproic acid, there is no FDA approval of anticonvulsant administration in bipolar disorder; this can limit insurance coverage for these meds. |
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