ic15 pharmacotx for parkinson's and alzheimer's Flashcards
what is “parkinson’s disease” and “alzheimer’s disease” (basic definition)
neurodegenerative disease where nerve cells in the brain or peripheral nervous system lose function over time and ultimately die
progressive and incurable
likelihood of developing a neurodegenerative disease dramatically incr with age
considering the pathophysiology of PD and AD, would drug effects be antagonistic or agonistic and broadly list the ways that drug can produce such effect
agonist
- drug incr synthesis of NT
- drug destroys degrading enzymes
- drug incr release of NT
- drug binds to autoreceptors to block their inhibitory effect
- drug binds to postsynaptic receptors to mimic effect of NT
- drug block deactivation of NT by blocking degradation or reuptake
what kind of sx do PD pts present with and what is is attributed to and are there any further consequences resulting from this primary cause
PD pts present with extrapyrimidal motor sx (tremors, rigidity, bradykinesia) due to striatal dopaminergic deficiency
various other NT systems can get involved over time and produce non-motor sx (autonomic, psychaitric, sensory, ocular, gait imbalance)
what is the epidemiology and course of PD (prevalence, types of PD, rate of progression, types of sx in later stages of PD)
prevalence: 1% of those aged >60yo have PD
other types of PD:
i) young onset PD - onset 21-40yo (5-10% of PD pts)
ii) juvenile onset PD - onset <20yo (typically genetically inherited)
rate of progression: markedly higher in early years of the disease (significant disability 10-15years after onset)
sx in later stages: motor fluctuation, dyskinesia and non motor sx like falls, postural instability, postural hypotension, confusion, dementia, speech and sleep disorders
what is “dyskinesia”
invountary erratic writhing movements of the face, legs, arms or trunk
what are the motor sx of PD and which are the cardinal sx
motor sx of PD:
i) tremor at rest (pill rolling)
ii) rigidity (cogwheeling)
iii) bradykinesia (slowness of movement)
iv) postural instability and gait disturbances
cardinal sx are i) to iii)
what is the pathophysiology of PD (what can you see or cannot see if looking at the structure and comparing it to a normal structure vs that in PD)
impaired clearing of abnormal or damaged intracellular proteins by the ubiquitin-proteosomal system and this failure to clear toxins results in accumulation of aggresomes (refers to an aggregation of misfolded proteins) which ultimately causes apoptosis
an eg. of aggresome would be lewy bodies that contains alpha-synuclein and ubiquitin
degeneration of dopaminergic neurons occurs with lewy body inclusions in the substantia nigra which leads to dysfunction of the nigrostriatal pathway
dopaminergic neurons postulated to be most vulnerable possible bc its the most metabolically active (if not all other NT would be just as affected)
normal substantia nigra would be darkly coloured signifying high presence of neuromelanin (pigment) vs PD substantia nigra would appear not as dark coloured or missing dark band
what are the components of the basal ganglia (which forms the basal nuclei and which forms the striatum and can rough sketch the location of each component)
- caudate nucleus
- putamen
- globus pallidus
- subthalamic nucleus
- substantia nigra
1,2,3 forms the basal nuclei
1,2 forms the striatum
what is the main role of the basal ganglia (and what happens if there is a loss of substantia nigra)
for motor control and has strong connections to other areas like thalamus, motor cortex etc
involved in action selection through release of inhibition
i) normally inhibits a number of motor systems
ii) substantia nigra mediated release of inhibition permits a motor system to become active
iii) involved both excitatory D1 and inhibitory D2 receptor
loss of substantia nigra = no release of inhibition = hypokinetic state
what makes up the grey and white matter
grey matter are neurons found on the surface of neocortex while white matter are axons, dendrites, processes of neurons
what kind of signals does the putamen in the basal ganglia receive
putamen receives excitatory signals via D1 receptors and inhibitory signals via D2 receptors from substantia nigra
how does loss of dopaminergic inputs resulting from loss of substantia nigra result in motor sx in PD (relate to the two paths)
[direct path] loss of dopaminergic inputs = hypoactivation of excitatory D1 receptors = weakens striatal inhibition of globus pallidus internal = inhibition of thalamus greater thus weaker activating force on motor cortex = lead to hypokinesia
[indirect path] loss of dopaminergic inputs = hypoactivation of inhibitory D2 receptors = strengthens striatal inhibition of globus pallidus external = weaker inhibition on subthalamic nucleus = stronger excitatory effect on globus pallidus internal = stronger inhibitory effect on thalamus = weaker activation on motor cortex = lead to hypokinesia
DIRECT PATH:
SN excites P, P inhibits GPi, GPi inhibits thalamus, thalamus activates motor cortex
INDIRECT PATH:
SN inhibits P, P inhibits GPe, GPe inhibits subthalamic nucleus, subthalamic nucleus excites GPi, GPi inhibits thalamus, thalamus excites motor cortex
how is dopamine synthesised and broken down
synthesis (occurs at presynapse):
i) L-tyrosine -> L-dopa through tyrosine hydroxylase
ii) L-dopa -> dopamine through DOPA decarboxylase
(release of dopamine into synaptic cleft then bind to D1 and D2)
breakdown:
dopamine -> -> homovanillic acid through COMT and MAO
or reuptake via dopamine transporters back into presynaptic cleft and recycled
does dopamine and L-dopa pass through BBB
dopamine does NOT pass through BBB but L-dopa passes through
what are the possible strategy that can be adopted considering the patho of PD and what drug for each strategy
- incr synthesis of dopamine: levodopa (synthetic L-dopa aka precursor of dopamine)
- inhibit dopamine breakdown via COMT: entacapone, tolcapone (COMTi)
- inhibit dopamine breakdown via MAO: selegiline, rasagiline (MAO-Bi)
- activate dopamine receptors: pramipexole, pergolide, ropinirole (dopamine receptor agonist)
- others: amantadine, trihexyphenidyl
what are the key features of levodopa
levodopa is the gold standard
contains L-dopa, the precursor of dopamine
typically a 2-in-1 preparation comprising of a peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor to
i) prevent systemic s/e resulting from excess DA
ii) also bc L-dopa can cross BBB so you inhibit peripheral DOPA decarboxylase means L-dopa stays as how it is in periphery and only converts into dopamine after it cross the BBB (reduces the amount of L-dopa wasted before it reaches brain)
eg. of peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor:
i) carbidopa
ii) benserazide
what are the s/e of levodopa (short term and long term)
short term s/e:
i) N/V
ii) postural hypotension
long term s/e:
i) motor fluctuations
ii) dyskinesia (10% /yr)
what is the moa of levodopa
levodopa contains L-dopa which is a dopamine precursor
what is the moa of entacapone/ tolcapone
they are inhibitors of COMT to inhibit the conversion of dopamine/ L-dopa into inactive form by COMT
what is the key feature of using COMTi (list eg. of COMTi)
COMTi like entacapone and tolcapone
only useful if used as adjunct therapy with levodopa or levodopa combi (w either carbidopa or benserazide which are peripheral DOPA decarboxylase inhibitors) to incr the amount of levodopa available to enter the brain thus can decr the dose and also incr duration of each dose which is beneficial for treating “wearing off” responses
only useful as adjunct bc while it can decr breakdown of dopamine, L-dopa is the one that crosses the BBB so decr breakdown of L-dopa is of significance