Anxiolytics Flashcards
What are the two classes of anxiolytics?
benzos
buspirone
Benzodiazepine pharmacokinetics
- highly pb
- high lipid solubility
- hepatic metabolism by cyp450
- eliminated via the kidneys
What is alprazolam used for?
(zanax)
- significant anxiety reducing effect
- used for primary anxiety and panic attacks
- can depress cortisol secretion
What are the different classes of antipsychotic drugs?
what do they treat?
- phenothiazines
- thioxanthenes
- butyrophenones
- atypical
- treatment of schizophrenia, mania/depression with psychotic features, psychoses, tourettes syndrome
- may be used as antiemetic at low doses
What are the Phenothiazine and Thioxanthene drugs?
- Phenothiazines
- Chlorpromazine (thorazine)
- Thioridazine (Mellaril)
- perphenazine (trilafon)
- Trifluoperazine (stelazine)
- Thioxanthene
- Thiothixene (navane)
What is the MOA of phenothiazines and thioxanthene?
MOA for antiemetic effects?
- blocks dopamine receptors (especially dopamine 2) in the basal ganglia and limbic portions of the forebrain
- interferes with dopamine, causing extrapyramidal side effects
- antiemetic: blocks dopamine receptors in chemoreceptor trigger zone of medulla
Phenothiazines and thioxanthene pharmacokinetics
- erratic patterns of absorption after po administration
- highly lipid soluble
- highly PB
Phenothiazines and Thioxanthene
Metabolism
- oxidation in liver with conjugation
- most have inactive metabolites
- E1/2t 10-20 hours
- prolonged in the elderly or those with decreased capacity to metabolize drugs
Phenothiazines and Thioxanthene
Side effects
- decreased BP- b/c of alpha block
- direct cardiac depression
- Extrapyramidal effects
- tardive dyskinesia
- Acute dystonic reactions
- sedation- from antagonism of alpha 1, muscarinic, and histamine receptors
- decrease in sz threshold
- decrease in sensory evoked potentials
- skeletal muscle relaxation
- neuroleptic syndrome
what is tardive dyskinesia?
tardive dyskinesia- abnormal involunarty movements involving the tongue, facial/neck muscles, extremeties, and occasionally skeletal muscle groups used in breathing/swallowing
occurs in 20% of pts receiving theapy for >1 year
elderly and women more susceptible
permanent
what is acute dystonia?
acute skeletal muscle rigidity and cramping in neck, tongue, face or back
usually within first few weeks of therapy
respiratory distress from laryngeal dyskinesia (laryngospasm)
responds well to diphenhydramine
How do the antiemetic effects of phenothiazines and thioxanthene work?
- interacts with dopaminergic receptors in chemoreceptor trigger zone
- effective in preventing opioid induced N/V
- no sedation or hypotensive effects and rarely cause extrapyramidal symptoms
What is neuroleptic malignant syndrome?
How is it treated?
- hyperthermia
- hypertonicity of skeletal muscles
- myogloinuria
- instability of autonomic NS
- fluctuation LOC
- Treatment:
- supportive care
- dantrolene
- dopamine agonists
What drugs do phenothizines and thioxanthen interact with?
- Opioids
- potentiation of sedation
- respiratory depression
- analgesic properties
How are Butyrophenones similar to phenothiazines?
What are the two medications?
- structurally similar
- similar side effects
- Droperidol
- haloperidol