Bipolar disorder Flashcards
distractability, hyperactivity, sleep disturbance and irritability represent a change in baseline behavior
diagnosis of bipolar
mania
euphoric or irritable mood, grandiosity, decreased need for sleep, pressured speech and racing thoughts and distractability and hyperactivity and impulsivity
patient can present with major depressive episode and so it’s important to ask
response to prior antidepressants, if underlying bipolar may have reacted poorly or induced a manic episode
also screen for episodes of mania in life
treatment of bipolar depression disorder
quetiapine- second generation anti psychotic
can use lurasidone and combo of olanzapine and fluoxetine.
can also be treated with lithium or lamotrigine or valproate
why do we not want to give a SSRI to treat someone with bipolar depression?
can induce mania or rapid cycling >4 mood episodes per year.
Drugs that increase lithium toxicity
diuretics, NSAIDS, SSRIs, ACEi or ARBs
Non dihydropyridine CCB (verapamil and diltiazem)
antiepileptic drugs (carbamazepine, phenytoin)
Clinical presentation of lithium toxicity
neurological confusion, agitation, vertigo, ataxia, neuromuscular excitability (irregular coarse tremors, fasciculations, and myoclonic jerks)
Cardiac manfestations: bradycardia and prolonged QTc interval
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
what are severe toxic lithium levels and what do you see?
lithium level of 2.5-3.5 mEq/L
NORMAL / goal levels: 0.8-1.2 mEq/L
see seizures and encephalopathy and coma
Note, drug levels may not correlate to degree of symptoms in acute toxicity
what can easily cause lithium toxicity
anything that decreases renal excretion (volume depletion with diuretics, NSAIDs, ACEi)
Need to monitor lithium levels
Note, drug levels may not correlate to degree of symptoms in acute toxicity
who is at risk for lithium toxicity
elderly pts due to reduced GFR
treatment of lithium toxicity is:
supportive care with IV fluids,
benzodiazepines for seizures
gastric decontamination (bowel irrigation with polyethylene glycol)
if needed and HD for severe toxicity
pt with bradycardia, prolonged QTc interval and on lithium for bipolar disorder. Started using NSAIDS for back pain and started on ACEi.
acute toxicity with lithium
see the cardiac manifestations.
Due to decreased renal perfusion increasing lithium levels.
intolerable insomnia while on venlafaxine are suggestive of
treatment emergent mania
may have underlying bipolar disorder
always assess someone prior to starting a SSRI that they have a history of mania and hypomanic episodes
prior to starting SSRI must ask about
periods of elevated mood, decreased need for sleep, racing thoughts, uncharacteristic risk taking behavior
ask family member as they may remember and pt may have limited insight, difficulty recalling, tendency to minimize the past manic or hypomanic episodes.
sluggishness, confusion agitation and neuromuscular excitability with irregular course tremors
acute on chronic lithium poisoning