biological therapies Flashcards

1
Q

antipsychotics

A

drugs used to rescue the intensity of symptoms, in particular the positive symptoms of psychotic conditions

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2
Q

typical antipsychotics

A
  • been around since the 1950s
  • including chlorpromazine
  • strong association between the use of typical antipsychotics like chlorpromazine and the dopamine hypothesis
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3
Q

how does chlorpromazine work

A

acts as an antagonist in the dopamine system

  • antagonists reduce the action of a neurotransmitter
  • dopamine antagonists work by blocking dopamine receptors receptors in the synapses of the brain reducing the action of dopamine
  • when you take chlorpromazine dopamine levels build up but then it’s production is reduced
  • reduces symptoms like hallucinations
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4
Q

atypical antipsychotics

A

used since 1970s

  • aim was to maintain or improve the effectiveness of drugs in suppressing the symptoms and minimise the effects
  • clozapine and risperidone
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5
Q

clozapine

A

developed in 1960s and first trialled in 1970s, withdrawn for a while in 1970s after deaths of some patients but then brought back in 1980s as it was more effective but only used when other treatments failed

  • can cause blood condition which dangerously lowers white blood cells which fight infection
  • people that take it have regular blood tests
  • binds to dopamine receptors but also acts on serotonin and glutamate which helps improve mood and reduce depression and anxiety
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6
Q

risperidone

A

developed to be as effective as clozapine but without its serious side effects

  • binds to dopamine and serotonin receptors
  • stronger binds so is effective in smaller doses
  • fewer side effects
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7
Q

evaluation for effectiveness

A
  • Thornley (2003)(typical)- effects of chlorpromazine, compared effects to control conditions where some patients had medication and others had placebo, data from 13 trials and 1121 participants- chlorpromazine had better overall functioning and reduced symptoms and relapse rate lower
  • Meltzer (2012)(atypical)- concluded clozapine is more effective than typical, effective in 30-50% of treatment where typical antipsychotics have failed
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8
Q

serious side effect

A
  • likelihood of side effects
  • typical- dizziness, agitation, weight gain, itchy skin, long term use can cause tardive dyskinesia (involuntary facial movements)
  • most severe symptom of typical is NMS, blocks dopamine action, results in high temperature, coma and could be fatal
  • atypical have fewer serious side effects, have regular blood tests
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9
Q

chemical cosh argument

A

widely believed that antipsychotics have been used in hospital situations to calm patients down for the staffs benefit rather than the patients

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10
Q

issues for patients in later life

A

argued that drug therapies for patients isn’t helpful as can lead to further issues for the patients such as becoming addicted or reliant on the drugs

-also argued that the drug may not actually help the condition but just hides its traits

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