Xerostomia_March 5 Flashcards
What receptors are mainly involved in saliva secretion?
Parasympathetic Muscarinic 3 (M3) cholenergic receptors
- Watery secretion
- Enzyme rich
- Parotid/submandibular
What receptors are involved in sympathetic innervation to saliva? What type of saliva is produced?
- Adrenoreceptor alpha-1
- Thick, viscous saliva
- Protein rich
- Mucin
- Sublingual/submandibular
What is the resting flow rate of saliva?
-1mL/min (1-1.5L per day)
How much of a role do major salivary glands play in saliva production?
70% submandibular
20% Parotid
10% Sublingual
What flow rate is considered xerostomia?
0.14 - 0.13L per day unstimulated
What is the composition of saliva?
Water (99.5%)
Solutes (0.5%) Buffering: HCO3-; PO4 3- Digestive: lysozyme, amylase (starch-->sugar), chloride (activates amylase) Immune: mucins, immunoglobulin Other ions: sodium, potassium Other proteins/enzymes: Albumin Urea, uric acid
How is acetylcholine made?
- Choline combines with acetylcoenzyme A, catalysed by ChAT enzyme
- Stored in vesicle
- Action potential causes calcium influx and release of ACh
- Short acting as once released into synapse acetylcholinesterase breaks it down into acetate and choline
- Choline gets recycled
What do the muscarinic receptors act on when activated?
M1: neuron
M2: cardiac
M3: glands
What effects can muscarinic receptors cause?
Parasymp effects
Glands: activated, sweating, tears, nasal discharge Eyes: Miosis (sphincter pupillae), near vision (ciliary muscle) Heart: decreased rate Blood vessels: dilate Lung: contraction/secretion Gut motility increased Bladder increased urination CNS stimulation
What types of drugs are normally used to promote cholinergic effects? Why?
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (As cholinergic receptors do not produce pleasant effects)
What is the difference between therapeutic acetylcholinesterase and poisons targetting the same enzyme?
- Therapeutic=reversible
- Poison=irreversible
What is the major side effect of cholinergic antagonists? What are some other side effects?
Dry mouth (remember that cholinergic receptors stimulate saliva flow)
- Dry eyes + blurred vision (dilated pupils)
- Constipation
- Urine retention
- Palpitations
- Drying of skin + mucosa
(For some unknown reason also vasodilation)
What classes of drug are anti-cholinergics?
- Naturally occurring: atropine
- Synthetic: Quaternary amines (ipratropium, benztropine)
- Tertiary amines: antihistamine, antidepressant, antipsychotic
What functions can cholinergic antagonists serve?
- Urinary incontinence (unintentional loss of urine)
- Parkinson’s (stops nerves from firing)
- Gut motility (prevents excess)
- Motion sickness (prevents nerves from firing–>this is a way for remembering, really they’re antihistamines)
- Asthma (causes bronchodilation)
- Anaesthetic
- Mydriasis (dilated pupil)
- Cycloplegia (unable to constrict lens for short range vision)
- Antidepressants
- Antipsychotics
- Antihistamine
*Note eye ones are eye drops and rarely cause dry mouth
What non-drug therapies can be done for dry mouth?
- Water
- Sugar free chewing gum
- Limit caffeine/alcohol