Antipsychotics Flashcards
Identify other names for Antipsychotics.
AKA
– Neuroleptics
– Antischizophrenic Drugs
– Major Tranquillisers
What is the common property of antipsychotics ?
Common property of antagonising the actions of dopamine in the brain (effectiveness of this class of drugs correlates well with affinity for D2 receptors i.e. ability to inhibit D2 receptors)
Identify the main clinical uses of antipsychotics.
Mainly used in the treatment of schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses. Some used clinically for other conditions:
– Emesis
– Huntingdon’s disease
– Depression
Identify the main theories of Schizophrenia.
Dopamine Theory
Glutamate Theory
Describe the Dopamine theory.
– Amphetamine produces symptoms almost indistinguishable from schizophrenia (by increasing catecholamine release including dopamine, but also NA)
– D2-receptor agonists produce similar symptoms in animals and exacerbate symptoms in humans (served to show that dopamine specifically served a role)
– Strong correlation between clinical potency of antipsychotics and D2 blocking action (suggests correlation between dopamine levels and schizophrenia)
– ↑ dopamine content in restricted area of the temporal lobe of schizophrenics (amygdala)
– ↑ dopamine synthesis and release in the striatum of schizophrenics
Identify the main nervous pathways whose disregulation will result in mood and behavior changes.
Mesocortical and mesolimbic (both dopamine pathways)
Describe the Glutamate theory of Schizophrenia.
– NMDA receptor antagonists (e.g. phencyclidine and ketamine) produce psychotic symptoms
– ↓ glutamate and receptor density reported in post- mortem schizophrenic brains
– Transgenic mice with ↓ NMDA receptor expression show stereotypic schizophrenic behaviours and ↓ social interactions
• respond to antipsychotics
– Glutamate and dopamine exert excitatory and inhibitory effects respectively on GABAergic striatal neurones
• project to the thalamus and constitute a sensory ‘gate’
– Too little glutamate or too much dopamine disables the ‘gate’ allowing uninhibited sensory input to reach the cortex
– Excess dopamine could be responsible for the positive symptoms and reduced glutamate for the negative symptoms
Identify the main classes of antipyschotic drugs.
FIRST GENERATION (FGAs) AKA CLASSICAL
SECOND GENERATION (SGAs) AKA ATYPICAL
Identify the main FGAs.
• Phenothiazines
– chlorpromazine, fluphenazine
• Butyrophenones
– haloperidol
• Thioxanthines
– flupentixol
Identify the main SGAs, and state the receptor each one works on.
• Benzamides
– Amisulpride (selective D2 and D3 receptor antagonist)
• Dibenzodiazepines
– clozapine and olanzapine (very unselective receptor blocking profile)
• Others
– Risperidone, paliperidone (mixture of receptor types blocked)
What are the main differences of SGAs cf FGAs ?
Distinction between typical and atypical groups is not clearly defined, but rests on:
– receptor profile (mainly other than dopamine)
– incidence of extrapyramidal side-effects
• (less in atypical group)
– efficacy in treatment-resistant group of patients (atypical more efficacious e.g. Clozapine)
– efficacy against negative symptoms (aypical more efficacious, but also improve positive symptoms)
State the clinical uses of Clozapine.
If patient doesn’t respond to first or second generation drugs, and adequate compliance (AKA treatment resistant), use Clozapine
What drugs should you use if there is only positive symptoms ? both negative and positive ?
Both: Second gen (improve negative as well as positive)
Positive: either first or second gen
Which of FGAs or SGAs is more effective at controlling symptoms of schizophrenia ?
No real evidence that SGAs are more effective than the first generation classical neuroleptics in controlling symptoms
Identify all the receptors that antipsychotics may have affinities to. State the function of each of these.
- Cholinergic (muscarinic) receptor (PSNS receptor on target tissue, also found in CNS)
- Alpha-adrinergic receptor (SNS, especially in vasculature)
- Dopamine receptor
- Serotonin receptor
- H1 Histamine receptor (involved in anaphylaxis, triple response)