Sketchy Pharm: Tricyclic Antidepressants Flashcards
What drugs are tricyclic antidepressants?
The -pramines: imipramine (the “IMPRInt” on Amy’s cheek), desipramine, and clomipramine
The -triptylines: amitriptyline and nortriptyline (Amy tripping on the tricycle)
By what mechanism do TCAs work?
They block the norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake channels
When are TCAs used?
When SSRIs and SNRIs fails
Other than resistant depression, for what disorders are TCAs used?
Diabetic neuropathy, OCD, and migraine (the bell, Dwayne and the marbles, and the guy with his hand stuck in the diasweeties machine)
TCAs are not used frequently due to their adverse effects. What are they?
Sexual dysfunction (gym teacher getting rejected)
Anticholinergic effects (atropine Alice’s tea party)
H1 histamine antagonism (guy swatting a bee-ball away)
Alpha-1 antagonism (vasodilation -> girl falling over by Alice)
Cardiac arrhythmia (the broken peaNAT cookies representing the blocking of fast sodium channels, with widening of QRS)
Convulsions – due to antagonist effect on GABA A (guy shaking on court)
Which TCAs have the fewest side effects?
Nortriptyline and desipramine (the ball bouncing off of NORThside PRep academy)
How would you treat the cardiac complications of TCA overdose?
Bicarb. This promotes the unionized version of TCAs to predominate, which is less able to block the sodium channels.