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BENZODIAZEPINES

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deterrent to discontinuing use. Difficult to distinguish between wd & rebound ... Not motivated to discontinue use. Pharmacology. ABSORPTION. tablets capsules ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BENZODIAZEPINES


1
BENZODIAZEPINES MEL POHL,
MD LAS VEGAS RECOVERY CENTER
2
Doctors who treat the symptom tend to give a
prescription Doctors who treat the patient are
more likely to offer guidance. J. Apley 1978
3
Emerging research suggests that optimum
benzodiazepine therapy consists of judicious,
circumspect, and critically monitored use of
benzodiazepines in terms of target symptoms and
diagnoses Rickels et al
4
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Secondary Substances for Primary Benzo Admissions
Dasis report 11/21/03
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Dosage Conversion Table for Benzodiazepines
Benzodiadepines Dosages (mg)
Half-life Alprazolam (Xanax)
1 6-10 Chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
25 5-100 Clonazepam (Klonopin)
.5 18-50 Clorazepate
(Tranxene) 15
30-200 Diazepam (Valium) 10
30-100 Estazolam (Prosom) 4
20-120 Flurazepam (Dalmane) 30
1-120 Midazolam (Versed) n/a
Lorazepam (Ativan)
2 10-20 Oxazepam (Serax)
30 3-21 Quazepam
(Doral) 30 20-120 Temazepam
(Restoril) 30
10-12 Triazolam (Halcion)
1 2-3 Zolpidem (Ambien) 20 2.5 Zaleplon
(Sonata) 20 1 Adapted from Giannini AJ.
Drugs of abuse. 2d ed. Los Angeles Practice
Management Information Corp., 1997121-5. Includ
es metabolites - in hours
10
new
Beta- carboline
tetracyclic
Antagonist
Triazolo ring
Short- acting
Cyclo- pyrrolone
Imidazo- pyridine
11
Other sedative-hypnotics
  • Barbiturates - pentobarbital,phenobarbital,
  • secobarbital, butalbital (Fiorinal)
  • Barb-like glutethimide, chloral hydrate,
    ethhchlorvynol (Placidyl), meprobamate
    (carisoprodol/Soma)
  • Azapirone buspirone (2-10 mg TID - max 60 mg/d)
  • -slow onset of action (1-3 wks)
  • -not abused, no withdrawal
  • -effective for anxiety disorders-not for acute
  • -does not block benzo withdrawal
  • -not sedating, anticonvulsant or mm relaxing
  • -no resp dep/ cognitive/psychomotor impair

12
Non-Benzo Hypnotics
  • Zolpidem (Ambien) imadozopyridine
  • Zaleplon (Sonata) pyrazolopyrimidine
  • Bind to specifically to BZ-1 sites
  • Both rapid onset (1h-2.5 h) - short action/1/2
    life
  • Decrease sleep latency, increase REM sleep
  • 5-20 mg dose range
  • Safe in older adults, metab in liver, no active
    metabolites
  • Potentiate ETOH impairment
  • Both reinforcing, potentially abusable, and
    performance-impairing

13
GHB Gamma Hydroxybutyrate
  • Club drug - G liquid ecstasy
  • Aqueous solution - variable concentration
  • Relaxation, disinhibition, euphoria
  • Rapid onset, short half-life (20 minutes)
  • Dependence and withdrawal occur
  • Narrow therapeutic window-side effects
  • Dizziness, nausea, emesis, dec resp, coma
  • Additive with ETOH and other sed-hypnotics

14
Therapeutic Uses
  • Sedative-hypnotic
  • Anxiolytic
  • Panic disorder
  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Muscle relaxants
  • Anticonvulsants
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Premenstrual syndrome
  • Psychoses
  • Adjunct in mania of bipolar disorder

15
Sedative/Hypnotic
  • Transient - lowest effective dose- time-limited
  • Insignificant decrease in sleep latency-1 hour
  • increase in sleep duration -? effect on sleep
  • architecture ( REM, stages 3 and 4)
  • Rebound insomnia - worsening of sleep - worse
  • than before trying benzos.
  • Daytime drowsiness, dizziness, lightheadedness

16
Anxiety
  • benzos good for immediate symptom relief-faster
  • than SSRIs for panic.
  • long-acting, low potency preferred (clonazepam or
  • chlordiazepoxide)
  • best used for exacerbations of anxiety-short term
    vs
  • continuous use

17
Adverse Effects
  • Diminished psychomotor performance
  • Impaired reaction time
  • Loss of coordination, decreased attention
  • Ataxia
  • Falls
  • Excessive daytime drowsiness
  • Confusion
  • Amnesia
  • Increase of existing depressed mood
  • Overdose rarely lethal

18
Treatment of Overdose
  • Airway assessment and maintenance
  • Ventilatory support if necessary
  • NG suction - activated charcoal
  • Flumazenil - competitive antagonist
  • May need to repeat Q30-60 minutes
  • Can induce withdrawal seizures in dependent pts.

19
REINFORCING EFFECTS
  • Increased with rapid drug effect - eg alprazolam
  • Subjective effects - high - e.g. diazepam,
    lorazepam,
  • triazolam, flunitrazepam, and alprazolam.
  • Speed of onset of pleasurable effects - eg GHB
  • Increased reinforcement in those with history of
  • drug abuse

20
Tolerance
  • Time-dependent decrease in effect.
  • Neurochemical basis unclear
  • Varying rates for different behavioral effects
  • sedative and psychomotor effects
  • diminish first (e.g. few weeks)
  • memory and anxiety effects persist
  • despite chronic use.
  • Varying rates with different benzos.
  • If no history of addiction, rarely see dose
  • escalation or overuse
  • Cross-tolerance with ETOH and other sed-hyp

21
Dependence
  • Negative reinforcement of withdrawal - major
  • deterrent to discontinuing use.
  • Difficult to distinguish between wd rebound
  • anxiety upon discontinuing drug.
  • Withdrawal-time-limited (not part of
  • original anxiety state)
  • Relapse-reemergence of original anxiety
  • Rebound - increased anxiety gt baseline
  • Also see insomnia, fatigue, headache, muscle
  • twitching, tremor, sweating, dizziness,
    tinnitus
  • difficulty concentrating, nausea, depression,
  • abnormal perception of movement, irritability

22
Dependence/Withdrawal, cont.
  • rarely -seizures, delirium, confusion, psychosis.
  • triggering of depression, mania, OCD.
  • 90 of long-term users (gt8mo-1yr) experience
  • significant withdrawal
  • insignificant wd if used less than 2 weeks
  • mild-moderate if used gt8 weeks
  • Slow taper (gt30days) with /- carbamazepine,
  • valproic acid, trazodone, imipramine.
  • CBT effective in dc-ing benzos and controlling
  • panic/anxiety.

23
Predictors of severe withdrawal
  • High-potency-quickly eliminated
  • (e.g. alprazolam, lorazepam, triazolam)
  • higher daily dose
  • more rapid rate of taper (esp last 50)
  • diagnosis of panic disorder (not GAD)
  • high pretaper levels of anxiety and depression
  • ETOH or other substance dependence/abuse
  • personality pathology -e.g. neurotic or dependent
  • Not motivated to discontinue use

24
Pharmacology
  • ABSORPTION
  • tablets gt capsules
  • some rapidly absorbed (e.g. diazepam) -more
  • reinforcing than oxazepam or temazepam
  • lorazepam best for IM (cdp precipitates, poorly
  • absorbed, diazepam absorption unpredictable.
  • lipophilic - cross blood brain barrier easily
  • conjugated in liver- form water soluble
    metabolites
  • (different metabolism for different benzos)

25
Pharmacology
  • Drug Interactions
  • additive with other CNS depressants
  • utilizes cytochrome P450-levels increased by
  • -SSRIs - (less with paroxetine/Paxil,
    citalopram/Celexa, and sertraline/Zoloft)
  • -ketoconazole, intraconazole
  • -antibiotics - erythromycin
  • -cimetidine, omeprazole
  • -ritonavir
  • -grapefruit juice
  • C-P450 impaired in elderly or liver failure- inc
    effects

26
Mechanisms of Action
  • Benzos bind to sites on GABA-A receptors
  • (primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in CNS)
  • Opens chloride ion channel
  • 20-30 of all synapses in mammalian brain
  • endogenous benzos exist in human brain/blood
  • chronic use - changes in gene expression on
  • GABA-A receptor function

27
Benzodiazepine Abuse
  • Two patterns of abuse -
  • recreational abuse (nonmedical use
  • to get high
  • quasi-therapeutic use - long-term drug-
  • taking inconsistent with accepted medical
  • Practice - multiple MDs
  • 467 internet sites to access scheduled Rx-
  • websites are short-lived -

28
CASE 1 ERIC C. Recreational Use
  • 34 yo caucasian male, single-lives in 1/2 way
    house
  • Alprazolam 2mg - chews up to 5-10 tabs per day-
  • Tolerance developed 4 months ago
  • Oxycodone 10 mg - up to 20 per day
  • Clonazepam 1mg - 6-8 per day for 2 weeks
  • History of ETOH - 1pint/day - DC 3 months ago
  • Withdrawal - tremors, nausea, vomiting, severe
  • anxiety, sleeplessness, backaches, anorexia,
    sweats
  • Supervised release from prison in 02-on
    probation.
  • Minimal depression, no SI, no psych Rx.

29
CASE 2 - Sharon Z.Quasi-therapeutic Use
  • 68 yo caucasian female, married, working as a
  • home health aide, husband is verbally abusive
  • Lorazepam 2mg - 9-10 per day - cut back to 5mg
  • per day because of confrontation with daughter
  • Ran out 2 days prior to admit - tried to get from
  • another MD who encouraged admission
  • WD - sever anxiety, tremor, diarrhea, neck pain,
  • sleep disturbance, decreased energy,
    depression.
  • No other substances - gambles 100/day if using
    pills
  • Attempted inpatient Rx 2 yrs ago, but left AMA
  • SI but no plan - tried venlafaxine, caused GI
    distress.

30
Detoxification
  • Traditional Taper Method - using benzo
  • Substitution and taper
  • Anticonvulsants (possibly decrease electrical
  • excitation in the limbic system)
  • Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
  • Gabapentin (Neurontin)
  • Valproic acid (Depakote)

31
Substitution and Taper-simple and uncomplicated
  • Phenobarbital, chlordiazepoxide or clonazepam
  • Calculate equivalent dose - provide in divided
    dose
  • Add prn doses of benzos during 1st week
  • After dose stabilized, gradually reduce dose -
    10
  • of starting dose.
  • Slow last 25 of dose - hold to stabilize
  • Frequent visits - withdrawal agreement

32
Tolerance Testing
  • High or erratic dose, illicit source,
    polysubstance
  • or alcohol plus benzo use.
  • In 24-hour medically monitored setting
  • 200 mg pentobarbital PO Q 2h - hold for
  • intoxication, slurred speech, ataxia,
    somnolence.
  • After 24-48 hrs, calculate 24 hr stabilizing dose
  • Give stabilizing dose for 24 hrs divided
  • Switch to phenobarbital (30mg 100mg
  • pentobarbital)
  • Initiate gradual taper

33
Additional Measures
  • Carbamazepine - decreased subjective symptoms
  • 200 mg TID
  • In conjunction with phenobarbital or cdp taper
  • GI upset, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, low Na.
  • Valproic acid - attenuates withdrawal -
    GABA-ergic
  • 250 mg TID
  • In conjunction with phenobarbital or cdp taper
  • Continue for 2-3 wks or more after taper
  • Need to check LFTs prior to starting
  • GI upset, bone marrow supression pancreatitis

34
Additional Measures, cont
  • Gabapentin - 200-300 mg TID - edema, fatigue
  • Tiagapine (Gabitril) - gaba-ergic -
  • Propranolol - diminish adrenergic s/s (60-120
    mg/d)
  • Clonidine - not effective
  • Buspirone - not effective
  • Trazadone - decreases anxiety-improve sleep -
    helpful
  • CBT - improves rate of successful discontinuation
  • and rate of abstinence from benzos

35
Taper Method
  • Slow, gradual decrease in dosage (e.g. .5 mg
  • Alprazolam every 3-5 days or as slow as .25mg
  • Every 7-14 days (or 10 of starting dose per
    wk)
  • Last doses are hardest to eliminate - (?5 per
    wk)
  • Varies from patient to patient
  • Ambulatory setting - reliable followup
  • Best with therapeutic-dose benzo dependence
  • Only benzo dependence (no other drugs/ETOH)
  • Supportive therapy
  • Limited Rx - withdrawal agreement

36
Mels Method
  • Phenobarbital protocol - uses modified CIWA
  • VS and score Q 2 hrs for first 24-48 hrs.
  • -Score 4-7 - 15 mg
  • -Score 8-15 - 30 mg
  • -Score 16-24 - 45 mg
  • -Score 25-30 - 60 mg
  • -Adjust dose upward based on symptom relief
  • -Anticonvulsant - gabapentin, valproic
    acid,tiagabine
  • -Psych eval - SSRIs, buspirone, quetiapine


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