Anti-depressants Flashcards
What are the emotional symptoms of depression?
Apathy, misery, pessimism
Low self esteem
Low motivation
Anhedonism
What are the biological symptoms of depression?
Loss of libido
Slowing of thought and action
Loss of appetite and sleep disturbance
What are the characteristics of unipolar depression and the two types?
Mood swing is in one direction
Late adult onset
Reactive: response to stressful life events, non-familial
Endogenous: unrelated to external stresses, familial pattern
What are the characteristics of bipolar depression?
Alternate between depression and mania
Early adult onset
Often genetic inheritance
Drug treatment e.g. lithium
What is the difference between depression and mania?
Depression: functional deficit in central monoamines
Mania: functional excess of MAs
What is reserpine known for?
Decreases levels of NA and 5-HT, lowers mood
Used as an anti-psychotic and in high BP
What is MOA of Tricyclic antidepressants and the pharmacokinetics?
e.g. Amitriptiline
Neuronal monoamine reuptake inhibitors
Increase levels of NA and 5-HT, slows reuptake
Also act on other receptors;
a2, beta, mAChRs, histamine
Delayed down-regulation of beta and 5-HT receptors.
90-95% PPB
Plasma half life 10-20hrs, long doa
Hepatic metabolism - active metabolites- renal excretion of glucuronide conjugates
What are the unwanted effects of TCAs at therapeutic doses and acute toxicity?
Therapeutic doses:
Atropine like effects
Postural hypotension
Sedation
Acute toxicity:
CNS-excitation, delirium, seizures -> coma, respiratory depression
CVS-cardiac arrhythmias, ventricular fibrillations/sudden death
What are the possible drug interactions of TCAs?
Drugs which compete for PPB e.g. aspirin, phenytoin
Drugs which increase TCA effects by competing for hepatic metabolic enzymes e.g. neuroleptics, oral contraceptives
Potentiation of CNS depressants
Antihypertensive drugs
What is the MOA of monoamine oxidase inhibitors?
e.g. Phenelzine
Non-selective MAO-A (NA + 5-HT) MAO-B (DA) inhibitors
Increase levels of NA and 5-HT in cytoplasm due to leakage of stores in presynaptic terminals
Irreversible inhibition -> long d.o.a
Delayed clinical effects
What are the pharmacokinetics of MOAIs?
Oral absorption
Short plasma half-life - long d.o.a
Metabolised in liver, excreted in urine
What are the unwanted effects of MAOIs?
Atropine-like effects (less than TCAs) Postural hypotension Sedation Weight gain Hepatotoxicity (rare)
What are the possible drug interactions of MAOIs?
Tyramine ‘cheese reaction’; breakdown of tyramine is blocked, increased NA release -> hypertensive crisis (throbbing headache, increased bp, intracranial haemorrhage).
Avoid co-admin of MAOIs and TCAs
Avoid co-admin of MAOIs and pethidine
Name a reversible MOAI
Moclobemide: reversible MAO-A inhibitor
Decreased drug interactions
Decreased duration of action
What is the MOA of SSRIs?
e.g. fluoxetine
Serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors