Mood Stabilizers Flashcards

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1
Q

Lithium MOA & levels

A

Exact mechanism of action is unknown (generally stimulates inhibitory neurotransmission and inhibits excitatory transmission)

reduces excitatory (dopamine and glutamate) but increases inhibitory (GABA) neurotransmission;

.6-1.2

Half life is 24 hours, steady state is achieved about 5 days

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2
Q

Lithium (lab monitoring)

A
  • Urinalysis, BUN, creatinine q 2-3months for 6 months, then q 6-12 months thereafter
  • Thyroid dysfunction - TSH 1-2x for first 6 months, q 6-12 months thereafter
  • Hypercalcemia - calcium q12 months
  • obtain a level within 2 weeks of a dose increase
    -PREGNANCY test
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3
Q

Lithium (side effects)

A

Nausea (10-20% of patients)

Diarrhea

Polyuria & polydipsia (up to 70% of patients)

Tremor (up to 25% of patients)

Sexual dysfunction

Weight gain

Cognitive impairment

Increased risk of serotonin syndrome with SSRI/SNRIs

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4
Q

Lithium (hydration)

A

Increased water intake will decrease lithium level, vice versa
Increased salt intake will decrease lithium level, vice versa

Dehydration leads to risk of toxicity as level rises

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5
Q

Valproic Acid (Depakote) MOA & Level

A
  • May inhibit voltage-sensitive sodium channels
  • May boost the actions of the neurotransmitter GABA

80-125 for acute mania, 50-100 for maintenance

For acute mania, dosing is weight based (15-20mg per kg)

Half life is 24 hours, steady state is achieved about 4-5 days

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6
Q

Valproic Acid (side effects)

A
Weight gain/insulin resistance
Nausea, vomiting
Hair loss
Sedation
Tremor
PCOS, amenorrhea, birth defect

Rarely, hepatic failure, thrombocytopenia, pancreatitis

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7
Q

Valproic Acid (blood monitoring)

A

Prior to starting:
- LFTs, CBC, pregnancy test

During treatment:

  • LFTs: frequently during first 6 months, then q6-12 months
  • CBC/platelets: periodically
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8
Q

Carbamazepine (Tegretol) MOA

A

may block voltage-sensitive sodium channels and inhibit release of glutamate

Not often prescribed due to how many drug-drug interactions

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9
Q

Lamotrigine (Lamictal) MOA

A

may reduce the release of excitatory glutamate

Effective for bipolar depression- treatment and prevention, less effective in preventing mania, does not treat active mania or hypomania, does not treat unipolar depression

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