A/34. Drugs used for treatment of neurodegenerative disorders. Nootropic drugs Flashcards
Drugs need to know in this topic
Levodopa/Carbidopa
Ropinirle
Pramipexole
Selegiline
Entacapone
Amantadine
Procyclidine
Memantine
Rivastigmine
Piracetam
Levodopa(L-DOPA)/Carbidopa
- *Mechanism of action:**
1. Dopamine precursor, enters the brain via L-amino acid transporter (LAT)
2. Converted to dopamine by the enzyme dopa decarboxylase → increased dopamine activity in the brain (bradykinesia ↓)
3. Levodopa is given with the drug Carbidopa → acts as a peripheral dopa decarboxylase inhibitor (does not cross the blood-brain-barrier)
Oral
- Parkinson disease
Side effects:
1. GI distress – nausea, vomiting, anorexia
2. Dyskinesia (‘on/off phenomenon’)
3. Hypotension, arrhythmias (peripheral effects of DA)
4. Psychosis, agitation, anxiety, delusion, hallucinations (central effects
od dopamine, regardless of the peripheral effects of carbidopa)
Selegiline
MAO inhibitors
- *Mechanism of action:**
1. Selective MAO-B inhibitor → decreased metabolism of dopamine → increased dopamine activity in the brain (bradykinesia ↓)
2. No tyramine interaction (no ‘cheese effect’) as seen with non-selective MAO inhibitors
Oral
Hepatic metabolism to form desmethylselegiline (neuroprotective) and amphetamine
(psychostimulant)
- Parkinson disease – monotherapy (early disease) or
adjunct to levodopa/carbidopa (advanced disease)
- *Side effects:**
1. Dyskinesia
2. Psychosis
3. Hypotension
4. Insomnia
5. Serotonin syndrome when used with SSRI’s
Entacapone
COMT inhibitors
Mechanism of action:
1. Catechol-O-methyl-transferase converts levodopa to 3-O-methyldopa (3-OMD)
2. 3-OMD acts as a partial agonist (antagonist in the presence of a full agonist) and competes with levodopa for transport and activity
3. Inhibition of COMT enhances levodopa uptake and efficacy
4. In the CNS, inhibition of COMT enhances dopamine activity
Oral
1. Parkinson disease (adjunct to levodopa/carbidopa)
- *Side effects:**
1. Related to increased levels of L-dopa
2. Sleep disorders
3. Hepatotoxicity (tolcapone)
Ropinirole
Pramipexole
Dopamine agonists
Oral
- Parkinson disease – monotherapy (early disease) or adjunct to
levodopa/carbidopa (advanced disease) - Pramipexole is a potential anti-oxidant
Side effects: - Dyskinesia
- Psychosis, hallucination
- Anorexia, nausea
Amantadine
- *Mechanism of action:**
1. Antiviral medication, weak to moderate anti-parkinsonism effect
2. Potentiate endogenous dopaminergic function by influencing the synthesis, release, or reuptake of dopamine
3. Muscarinic blockade
4. NMDA receptor blockade
Oral
- Parkinson disease (adjunct to levodopa/carbidopa)
* *Side effects:** - Livedo reticularis (specific dermatological presentation)
Procyclidine
- Muscarinic blockade → decrease the excitatory activity of cholinergic neurons in the striatum
- Improves tremor and rigidity, no effect to bradykinesia
- Oral
- Parkinson disease (not recommended as monotherapy at early
disease) - Drug-induced extra-pyramidal symptoms
Side effects: (‘atropine-like effects’) - Dry mouth
- Urinary retention
- Constipation
- Hyperthermia
- Sinus tachycardia
- Mydriasis
- Blurred vision
- Toxicity (‘3 C’s’) → cardiotoxicity, convulsions, coma
Contraindications: - Glaucoma
- Prostatic hyperplasia