Neuropharmacology Flashcards
What are the two types of factors that determine the success of a pharmacological treatment?
- Primary issues – related directly to the disease and its pathology
o Understanding of the pathophysiology of the disease
o Choice of the correct treatment target - Secondary issues – related directly to the therapeutic regime chosen (e.g. type of drug, mode of administration)
o Ensure that drugs reach the target
o Minimise the adverse effects
o Manage any drug-resistance
How is current neuroscience moving from a neurone-centric approach?
- Note: current neuroscience research is moving from a neurone-centric approach, to the recognition of the importance of the non-neuronal cells (glia)
What is a therapeutic target? What would be the ideal case for a neurological target? Why is this often not the case?
- A target in therapeutics is a well-defined entity (e.g. a receptor, an enzyme…)
- Ideal case: a disease would be clearly associated with a specific CNS region and a well-defined cellular target within that region – but most neurological disease has a much higher level of complexity and involves intricate brain networks
How are chemical synapses involved in treatment targets?
See diagram in lecture notes
What are important questions to consider when treating a disease affecting the CNS?
- Is it possible to identify the CNS structure associated with a specific disease?
- What is the best target for a disease, and is it one or more targets?
- Can we make drugs to affect that target?
- Will the drugs reach the target?
- Do patients always respond to treatment?
What are 4 examples of disease affecting the central nervous system?
Parkinson’s Disease
Depression
Schizophrenia
Addiction
What are the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and Parkinsonism? What is the cause of this, and which monoamine deficits are associated with it? How are the two conditions different?
- Tremor, rigidity and slow movement
- Slurred speech, affected gait
- Irreversible disease progression
- Loss of a specific group of cells in the brain (in the substantia nigra) which produce dopamine
- Deficit in dopamine
- Note: parkinsonism (seen often in boxers) is a state that reproduces many characteristics of Parkinson’s disease
See synapse diagram in lecture notes
What is dopamine and how is it synthesised?
- Dopamine is a monoamine neurotransmitter
See diagram in notes for biosynthesis
What are the treatment options for Parkinson’s? What might the problems with these be?
- Examples:
- Provide the deficient neurotransmitter: dopamine
- Provide dopamine precursors: L-Dopa
- But neither can reach the brain after peripheral administration!!
- Dopamine cannot reach the brain
- Systemic oral administration of L-Dopa leads to conversion into dopamine outside the brain - and this can trigger intense vomiting, triggered by peripheral formation of dopamine
What is the solution to the problems with treating Parkinson’s with L-Dopa?
- Provide L-Dopa combined with an inhibitor of the enzyme L-aromatic
- amino acid decarboxylase, WHICH DOES NOT HAVE
ACCESS TO THE BRAIN, therefore L-Dopa is converted into dopamine ONLY IN THE BRAIN - Another solution is to stimulate the dopamine receptors directly with dopamine receptor agonists
- (Agonist = a compound that stimulates directly receptors)
See equation in notes
What are the symptoms of schizophrenia? Which monoamine is increased? What type of pathology is it?
- Significant cognitive disruption
- Hallucinations, delusions
- Paranoid behaviour
- Disruption of social contact
- Withdrawal from family and friends
- Hyperactivity in the ventral striatum
- Increased release of dopamine
- But note that other structures are also affected.
o It is a diffuse pathology.
See synapse diagram in notes
What are the treatment options for schizophrenia?
- Example:
- Provide dopamine receptor antagonists (antipsychotic or neuroleptic drugs)
- Antipsychotic drugs block dopamine receptors – BUT THEY ALSO BLOCK OTHER RECEPTORS…
- Lack of specificity of a drug causes inevitably adverse (side) effects
- Example: the antipsychotic drug thioridazine acts on a variety of receptors
See pie chart in notes
What are the adverse effects of antipsychotic drugs?
- Extrapyramidal effects (e.g. parkinsonism)
- Rise in prolactin (breast enlargement, amenorrhoea)
- Weight gain
- General - allergic and toxic reactions
- Anticholinergic (antimuscarinic) effects
- Postural hypotension
- And no way to avoid these adverse effects – they are part of the lack of specificity of the antipsychotic drugs. The drugs bind to many targets, which causes the emergence of adverse effects.
What are the symptoms and causes of depression? Which monoamine deficits are involved?
- Low mood
- Lack of energy
- Disrupted sleep
- Loss of interest
- Tiredness
- Dysfunction in the activity of monoamine systems in the brain
- Insufficient level of serotonin and noradrenaline
- Extensive innervation of the forebrain by serotonin and noradrenaline neurones
See synapse diagram in notes
What are the treatment options for depression?
- Examples:
- Increase monoaminergic transmission through various mechanisms (e.g. inhibitors of transport/reuptake of monoamines, such as the tricyclic antidepressants or the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors…)