Psych - Depression & Suicide Risk Flashcards
How long does it typically take for antidepressants to reach therapeutic dose?
~ 3-6 weeks
Thus if not therapeutic effect at ~ 2 months then:
- Change dose
- Switch to different antidepressant
- Augment with another agent
All antidepressants have a similar response rate - what is this %?
~67% of pts respond to an antidepressant after 8 weeks (expect some benfit from 2 weeks onwards)
33% = non responders
What is the MoA of TCAs?
- Serotonin reuptake inhibition (SERT anatgonism)
- Noradrenaline reuptake inhibition (NET anatagonism)
-
SHAM receptor antagonism:
- S = serotonin (5HT receptors)
- H = histamine receptors
- A = alpha adrenergic receptors
- M = muscarinic acetycholine receptors
What are some side effects of TCAs?
-
Histamine - R antagonism:
- Sedation
- Weight gain
-
Alpha adrenergic-R antagonism:
- Drowsiness
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Reflex tachycardia
- Erectile dysfunction
-
Muscarinic ACh-R antagonism:
- Blurred vision
- Glaucoma
- Dry mouth (↓ saliva i.e. xerostomia)
- Urinary retension
- Constipation
- Cognitive impairment
- ↓ seizure threshold
-
Cardiotoxic:
- Prolong QT interval
- Arrhythmias
- Prolong QT interval
What are the differences between secondary and tertiary TCA’s?
-
Secondary:
- Act primarily on noradrenaline reuptake inhibition
- Same side effects as teritary TCAs but less severe
- E.g. desipramine, nortriptyline
-
Tertiary:
- Act primarily on serotonin reuptake inhibition
- Side effects = many
- E.g. amytriptyline, doxepin, clomipramine
What are TCAs used to treat?
- MDD (major depressive disorder) –> not often!! other antidepressants are more commonly used due to TCAs side effects + toxicity in OD
- Neuropathic pain
- Migraine prophylaxis (amitriptyline)
- Chronic tension-type headache prophylaxis (amitriptyline)
List some conditions that SSRIs are used to treat?
- MDD
- GAD
- OCD
- Eating disorders e.g. Bulimia nervosa
- Panic disorder
- PTSD
Which SSRI is safest to use post MI?
Sertraline
Which SSRI is safest to use in children and adolescents?
Fluoxetine
What are some common side effects of SSRIs?
Side-effects:
- GI disturbance (most common) - pain, diarrhoea, vomiting
- Sexual dysfunction (30%)
- Anxiety + agitation - pts counselled to watch for
- Dry mouth
- Hyponatraemia
- Restlessness
- Nervousness
- Insomnia
- Fatigue / sedation
- Dizziness
What drug should be prescribed alongside an SSRI and why?
A PPI (proton pump inhibitor)
e. g. omeprazole, lansoprazole
* Because GI disturbance is the most common side effect of SSRIs
What are common drug interactions for SSRIs?
-
NSAIDs e.g. aspirin
- (NICE: do not prescribe, but if you do, also give a PPI)
-
Warfarin / heparin
- NICE: avoid and consider mirtazapine
- Triptans (avoid)
-
MAO-inhibitors
- risk of serotonin syndrome (excess serotonins impact on the CNS)
What is and what causes serotonin syndrome?
Serotonin syndrome is the result of excess serotonin acting on the CNS
Cause = serotonin increasing drug OD or combination
- SSRIs
- SNRIs
- MAOI
- TCAs
- Ecstasy (MDMA)
- Amphetamines
What are the features of serotonin syndrome?
How is serotonin syndrome managed?
Features:
- Rapid onset (min-hours of serotonin ↑)
- Neuromuscular excitation e.g. hyperreflexia, myoclonus, rigidity, tremor
- Autonomic NS excitation e.g. hyperthermia, sweating, dilated pupils, ↑ HR, HTN, diarrhoea
- Altered mental state, agitation / irritability
- Complications: seizures + rhabdomyolysis
Management:
- Discontinue offending medications that ↑ serotonin
- Supportative e.g. IV fluids, active cooling
- Benzodiazepines (↓ agitation)
- Severe cases = serotonin antagonist e.g. chlorpromazine or cyproheptadine
For how long should a pt continue to take an antidepressant after remission is induced?
6 months
This reduces the risk of relapse into depression
What are the risks of stopping antidepressant medication too fast?
Discontinuation symptoms!!
- ↑ mood change
- Dysphoria (generalized dissatisfaction with life)
- Restlessness
- Difficulty sleeping
- Unsteadiness
- Paraesthesia
- Sweating
- GI symptoms: pain, cramping, diarrhoea, vomiting
Name some of the pros and cons of the following SSRIs
(think about: half life, P450, sedation, side-effects - mainly just study the table on otherside)
- Fluoxetine
- Sertraline
- Citalopram
- Escitalopram
- Paroxetine
How should stopping treatment with SSRIs be done?
Is this different for any SSRIs specifically?
SSRI dose ↓ gradually over 4 weeks (varies for each pt)
- Fluoxetine = reduction / cessation can occur faster with fluoxetine as it has a long half-life –> thus ↓ likelihood of withdrawal symptoms
- Paroxetine = ↑ incidence of discontinuation symptoms