Antipsychotics Flashcards
1
Q
Quetiapine
A
- atypical
- risk for QT interval prolongation
2
Q
Haloperidol
A
- typical
- strongest D2 blockade, lightest alpha 1 blockade, no muscarinic blockade (therefore weakest autonomic effects)
- extrapyramidal effects: parkinson-like syndrome, bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor
3
Q
Thioridazine
A
- typical antipsychotic
- moderate D2 blockade, strongest alpha 1 and muscarinic blockade (strongest autonomic effects)
- postural hypotension and failure to ejaculate
- atropine-like effects
- urinary retention
4
Q
Fluphenaine and trifluoperazine
A
- atypical
- more potent piperazine sidechains
- extrapyramidal effects
5
Q
Clozappine
A
- atypical
- D4 antagonist with alpha 1, serotonin, and M blockade
- unique tox: agranulocytosis
- reserved for tx-resistant schizophrenia
6
Q
Aripiprazole
A
- atypical
- partial agonist at D2
- metabolized by CYP3A4, which is inhibited by grapefruit, azoles, and protease inhibitors and induced by bupropion, fluoxetine, and paroxetine
7
Q
Pharmacokinetics of antipsychotics
A
- high 1st pass
- lipid soluble, can cross placenta
- extensively protein bound
- metabolized by P450s
- mesoridazine is a metabolite of thioridazine, which is more active than parent compound
- usually dose once/day (except quetiapine and ziiprasidone)