Antipsychotics Flashcards
Where do negative symptoms and cognitive disorders arise from?
- what does this mean the problem is for the patient?
MESOCORTICAL - ventral tegmentum (brain stem) to the cerebral cortex
- too little dopamine
Where do positive symptoms and cognitive disorders arise from?
- what does this mean the problem is for the patient?
Mesolimbic - projects from the dopaminergic cell bodies in the spinal cord to the limbic system
hallucinations, delusions and thought disorders
too much dopamine
what is the nigrostriatal pathway and where does it project from?
- what is this pathway responsible for?
dopaminergic cell bodies in the substantia nigra to the basal ganglia
- movement regulation
what does dopamine suppress?
acetylcholine activity
what can dopamine hyperactivity cause?
parkinsonian movements ie rigidity, bradykinesia tremors, dystonia, akathisia
Tuberoinfundibular pathway projects from?
hypothamus to anterior pituitary
dopamine inhibits/regulates whats release?
prolactin
Blocking dopamine in the Tuberoinfundibular pathway causes?
hyperprolactinemia
- reduced libido
- gynecomastia
high potency typical antipsychotics bind to?
D2 receptor with high affinity
= extrapyramidal side effects
typical antipsychotics examples
Haloperidol, Pimozide, Fluphenazine
low potency typical antipsychotics tend to interact more with?
nondopaminergic receptors
cardiotoxic and anticholinergic side effects such as
- dry mouth, blurred vision , hypertension, sedation
low potency typical antipsychotic example?
chlorpromazine
what are atypical antipsychotics?
they are SDA antagonists
- affect dopamine and serotonin neurotransmission in the 4 dopamine pathways
most likely atypical to cause extrapyramidal effect?
risperidone
- weight gain and sedation (at high doses)
Olanzapine can be given ..?
rapid IM injection - useful for patents who refuse medication