Affective disorders Flashcards
Name three mood disorders
Bipolar affective disorder
Depressive episode
Recurrent depressive disorder
What are the two groups of depressive disorder?
Unipolar: patient’s mood is either depressed or normal
Bipolar: patient has episodes of either depressed or elevated mood. The mood deviates from normal in both spectrums.
How can you classify if depression is mild, moderate or severe?
Mild: 5 symptoms occuring every day for 2 weeks
Moderate: Symptoms or functional impairment between mild/severe
Severe: most symptoms present, affect functioning.
Chronic depression if symptoms persist >2 years
What are the two main neurotransmitters involved in regulating mood?
NorA: Main site of production in the locus ceruleus
5HT: Main site of production is raphe nuclei in medulla
Treatment stratgies for depression
Pharmacological:
tri-cyclic antidepressants
MAOIs
SSRIs
Atypical antidepresant
Psychological: CBT
Medical:
Transcranial magenetic stimulation
Electroconvulsive therapy
Content of a MENTAL STATE examination
Appearance and behaviour
Speech
Affect (observable mood)
Thoughts (delusions or morbid ideas)
Perceptions (hallucinations or illusions)
Insight (comparing patient and dr. idea about problem)
Cognitions (memory, attention, visuospacial)
What are the main actions of tri-cyclic antidepressants?
5HT reuptake blocker
NA reuptake blocker
α1 adrenoreceptor antagonist (postural hypotension)
H1 receptor antagonist (weight gain, sedation)
M1 receptor antagonist (dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention)
Why are SSRIs given to patients with depression who have cardiac disease
SSRIs have fewer anticholinergic effects and are less sedating than TCAs.
TCAs have cardiotoxic effect - produce long QT interval, ST elevation, heart block, arrhythmias. Dangerous in overdose.
Mechanism of action of SSRIs
Block serotonin reuptake pumps at the presynaptic membrane.
e.g. fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline
Cause GI disturbance and sexual dysfunction
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors used in depression
Target MAOI-A
Inhibit monoamine oxidase within nerve endings. Cytosolic NA and 5HT increases and more leaves out into the synaptic cleft.
State 3 side effects of MAOIs
Increase levels of NorA and 5HT. Leads to:
Postural hypotension
Restlessnes
Convulsions
‘Cheese reaction’. Foods containing tyramine normally broken down by MAO in the gut and liver. Increased blood levels can cause increased neurotransmitter relese = severe hypertension.
Serotonin syndrome
Caused by drug interactions of SSRIs
Hyperthermia, CV problems, aggression, tremor, rigidity.
Name three atypical antidepressants
NorA reuptake inhibitors (Reboxetine)
Serotonin-NorA reuptake inhibitor (Venlafaxine)
5HT partial agonist (Buspirone)
Sedative anti-depressants
e.g. Mirtazapine
Block alpha-adrenergic receptors. a2-receptors inhibit presynaptic release. Blocking receptor increases the amount of NorA in synaptic cleft.
No effect on uptake of aminotransmitters.
Why would you give a depressed patient lithium?
General mood stabiliser. Used in prophylaxis for manic/depressive illness.
Must be carefully monitored.