CNS Disorders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

CNS Disorders

Description:

CNS Disorders & Misc Neurological Disorders Week 8 * * * * * * 2.3 million Americans 100,000 deaths/ year 4th leading cause of death ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:100
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: PatrickH161
Category:
Tags: cns | aging | anti | disorders

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CNS Disorders


1
CNS Disorders Misc Neurological Disorders
Week 8
2
(No Transcript)
3
Diseases du jour
  • Parkinson's
  • Alzheimer's
  • Epilepsy
  • Muscle Spasm
  • Brain Trauma
  • Meningitis, Encephalitis
  • CVA
  • Peripheral
  • Multiple Sclerosis
  • Guillain-Barre Syndrome
  • Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

4
CNS Pharmacology
  • Peripheral neurotransmitters 3
  • CNS neurotransmitters at least 12
  • Exact actions may be unknown
  • Areas of brain with no known transmitter
  • Blood-brain barrier
  • Pharmacologic considerations
  • Delayed full effect
  • Tolerance, decreased side effects
  • Physical dependence

5
Parkinson's Disease
  • Extrapyramidal system
  • Neuronal network responsible for regulation of
    movement
  • Dyskinesias
  • Tremor, Mask
  • Postural instability
  • Bradykinesia, akathisia
  • Psychologic disturbance
  • Dementia, depression, impaired memory

6
Parkinson's Disease
  • Balance Neurotransmitters in EPS striatum
  • Acetylcholine (excitatory)
  • Dopamine (inhibitory)
  • Supplied by neurons in substantia nigra
  • 70-80 of dopamine supplying neurons must be lost
    before Parkinson's symptoms appear

7
Parkinson's Treatment
  • Currently unable to reverse degeneration
  • Drugs improve dyskinesias, but not tremor and
    rigidity
  • Drug Strategies
  • Increase dopamine (Dopaminergic)
  • Inhibit acetylcholine (Anticholinergic)

8
Dopaminergic Drugs
  • Promote dopamine synthesis
  • Stimulate dopamine receptors
  • Inhibit dopamine breakdown
  • Promote dopamine release
  • Block dopamine reuptake
  • Anticholinergics all block muscarinic receptors

9
Drug Selection
  • Mainstay
  • Levodopa most effective, long term side effects
  • Dopamine agonists less effective, fewer side
    effects
  • Combination

10
Levodopa
  • Promotes dopamine synthesis in surviving neurons
  • Highly effective, but fades over time (5 years)
  • Adverse effects long term dyskinesias
  • Acute loss of effect
  • Gradual Wearing off
  • Abrupt on-off

11
Levodopa
  • Kinetics
  • Well absorbed PO, delayed by food, esp protein
  • Most levodopa metabolized in periphery
  • Small amount crosses BBB
  • Adverse effects (most dose dependent)
  • NV (take on empty stomach)
  • Dyskinesias (80)
  • CV postural hypotension
  • Psychosis (20), neurotoxicity

12
Levodopa
  • Drug holiday
  • Drug Interactions
  • Conventional antipsychotics
  • MAO inhibitors
  • Anticholinergic Drugs
  • Food Interactions

13
Levodopa plus Carbidopa
  • Brand Sinemet
  • Most effective PD drug we have
  • Carbidopa enhances levodopa action
  • Inhibits peripheral metabolism
  • Reduces NV, CV effects

14
Dopamine Agonists
  • Four drugs
  • 2 ergot derivatives (bromocriptine and pergolide)
  • 2 nonergot (pramipexole and ropinirole)
  • Ergots have more side effects
  • Nonselective
  • Also stimulare alpha and serotonin receptors
  • Nonergot adverse effects
  • Nausea, dizziness, day somnolence, insomnia,
    constipation, hallucinations

15
Other Parkinson's Drugs
  • COMT inhibitors
  • Selegine (MAO-B inhibitor)
  • Amantidine
  • Anti-viral
  • Promotes release of dopamine
  • May block reuptake
  • Anticholinergics reduce tremor, not bradykinesia
  • Better tolerated, less effective

16
Alzheimer's Disease
  • Progressive memory loss and decreased cognitive
    function
  • Pathophysiology
  • Neuronal degeneration
  • Reduced Cholinergic Transmission
  • Characteristic morphology
  • Amyloid plaques
  • Neurofibrillary tangles
  • Apo E4, ER-assoc binding protein, homocysteine

17
Risk Factors
  • Age
  • 90 older than 65
  • Rises exponentially thereafter
  • Early Symptoms
  • Memory Loss!!!
  • Disorientation
  • Changes in personality and judgment

18
Symptoms Cont
  • Moderate symptoms
  • Difficulty with ADLs
  • Anxiety, suspiciousness, lack of recognition
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Wandering, pacing
  • Severe symptoms
  • Loss of speech
  • Loss of appetite
  • Loss of bladder and bowel control

19
Evaluation and Treatment
  • Diagnosis exclusion
  • Treatment
  • Typically die 4-8 years after diagnosis
  • Delay progression of symptoms long enough for
    them to die of something else.
  • The cardiologists are winning
  • Drug therapy
  • Cholinesterase inhibitors
  • Calcium channel stabilizer

20
Cholinesterase inhibitor
  • In Alzheimer's, acetylcholine transmission in
    brain is 90 lower than with normal aging
  • Acetylcholine essential for forming memories
  • Inhibitors help 30 mild-moderate patients
  • Three agents
  • Donezepil (Aricept)
  • Rivastigmine (Exelon)
  • Galantamine (Razadyne)

21
Calcium Channel Stabilizer
  • Amyloid plaques may cause excess influx of
    calcium into neurons
  • Memantine (only CCS)
  • Downregulates calcium channel
  • filters out the noise
  • Moderate to severe dementia

22
Epilepsy
  • Group of related disorders
  • Excessive neuron excitability in CNS
  • Seizure
  • Unconsciousness
  • Mild Twitching
  • Convulsions
  • 100,000 new cases/year most in elderly
  • 300,000 peds cases in U.S.

23
Seizures
  • Focus group of hyperexcitable neurons
  • Causes
  • Congenital defects
  • Hypoxia at birth
  • Head Trauma
  • Cancer
  • Seizure
  • Synchronous, high frequency depolarization of a
    focus that spreads to other parts of the brain
  • Manifestations depend on location of focus and
    recruitment of other parts of the brain

24
Seizure Types
  • Partial only part of the brain
  • Simple
  • Complex
  • Generalized throughout brain
  • Tonic-clonic (Grand mal)
  • Absence (Petit mal)
  • Atonic (head drop, drop attack)
  • Myoclonic
  • Status Epilepticus
  • Febrile not associated with epilepsy

25
Seizures
  • Stages
  • Aura
  • Seizure
  • Post-ictal
  • Confusion
  • Disorientation
  • Weakness
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Status Epilepticus
  • Seizure that lasts gt30 minutes

26
Anti-Epileptic Drugs
  • Suppress discharge of neurons in a focus
  • Suppress propagation of of seizure
  • Three basic mechanisms
  • Suppression of Sodium influx
  • Suppression of Calcium influx
  • Potentiation of GABA
  • Therapeutic Goal
  • Reduce seizures to extent that patients live a
    normal life 60 70 controlled on therapy
  • Seizure control vs. tolerability of side effects

27
Therapy
  • Non-drug therapy
  • Surgery
  • Vagal nerve stimulation
  • Ketogenic diet
  • Drug selection
  • Drug must be matched to seizure type
  • Evaluation
  • Hx Symptoms and precipitating events
  • Neurologic examination
  • EEG, CT, PET, MRI

28
Drug Therapy
  • Acute Seizure benzo (diazepam, lorazepam)
  • Trial Period establish effectiveness
  • No driving, operating heavy machinery, swimming
    must be supervised, etc.
  • May need to switch agents or add a second
  • Evaluation
  • Drug levels
  • Frequency chart
  • Promoting Compliance
  • Undertreatment causes 50 of all seizures
  • Withdrawing therapy slowly (6 months)

29
Anti-Seizure Medications
  • Conventional (pre-1990)
  • Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
  • Ethosuximide (Zarontin)
  • Phenobarbital
  • Phenytoin (Dilantin)
  • Valproic acid (Depakote)
  • Newer (post-1990)
  • Oxcarbazepine
  • Gabapentin (Neurontin)
  • Topiramate (Topamax)

30
Phenytoin
  • Oldest selective seizure med
  • Seizure activity
  • Partial
  • Generalized tonic-clonic
  • Mechanism of Action
  • Slows sodium channel recovery
  • Does not affect non-excitable neurons

31
Phenytoin Kinetics
  • Absoprtion
  • Varies greatly with individual
  • Instant vs. sustained release
  • Can be given IV (cautions)
  • Metabolism
  • Liver has very limited capability to metabolize
  • Saturation kinetics
  • Exponential vs. linear
  • Must carefully monitor

32
Phenytoin Adverse Effects
  • CNS
  • Mild sedation at therapeutic levels (10 20)
  • Toxic levels (gt20) nystagmus, sedation, ataxia,
    diplopia, cognitive impairment
  • Gingival hyperplasia (20) hygiene!!!
  • Rash
  • Pregnancy cleft palate, heart malformation, and
    other sundry badnesses

33
Phenytoin Interactions
  • Decreases effects of OCs, warfarin, steroids
  • Increased by diazepam, cimetidine, acute ETOH,
    valproic acid
  • Decreased by carbamazpine, phenobarbital,
    chronic ETOH
  • Synergy Other CNS depressants

34
Carbamazepine
  • Seizure acitvity partial, tonic-clonic
  • Mechanism same as phenytoin
  • Preferred in children
  • Also Bipolar d/o neuralgias
  • Adverse effects
  • Visual disturbance, vertigo, unsteadiness,
    headache
  • Bone marrow suprression, rarely aplastic anemia
  • Birth defects
  • Interactions Ocs, Warfarin, Dilantin, Phenobarb,
    Grapefruit juice

35
Valproic Acid
  • Seizure activity Unique, can treat all types
  • Mechanism Sodium Calcium channels, and GABA
  • Uses Seizures, Bipolar, Migraine
  • Kinetics
  • Readily absorbed
  • Widely distributed
  • Hepatic metab
  • Renal excretion

36
Valproic Acid
  • Adverse effects
  • Nausea
  • Fatal hepatotoxicity
  • Don't use in conjunction with other drugs lt3 yrs
  • Don't use in pre-existing liver conditions
  • Check a baseline LFT
  • Educate on symptoms Reduced appetite, malaise,
    ABD pain, jaundice
  • Pancreatitis
  • Neural tube defects

37
Ethosuximide Phenobarbital
  • Ethosuximide
  • Seizure activity absence
  • Mechanism Calcium channels
  • Adverse effects drowsiness, dizziness
  • Phenobarbital
  • Barbiturate, but can reduce seizures without
    causing sedation
  • Usually used adjunct
  • Persistent Status epilepticus (Barbiturate coma)

38
Newer Anti-Epileptics
  • Generally used if do not respons to older drugs
  • Exception Oxcarbazepine
  • Carbamazepine derivative
  • As effective, fewer side effects, more expensive
  • Gabapentin (Neurontin)
  • Seizures Used only as adjunct for partial
    seizures
  • PHN, Invest bipolar, neuropathic pain, migraine,
    leg cramps
  • Topiramate (Topamax)
  • Seizures Used only as adjunct for partial
    seizures
  • Bipolar, cluster headaches, migraines

39
Brain Trauma
  • Most common causes
  • MVC
  • Falls
  • Sports
  • Violence
  • Coup vs Contrecoup
  • Focal Brain Injury contusions, epidural
    hemorrhage, subdural hematoma
  • Diffuse brain injury

40
Concussion
  • Mild
  • Grade I Confusion, disorientation, moment
    amnesia
  • Grade II retrograde amnesia develops 5-10 min
    post
  • Grade III Retrograde amnesia at moment 5-30 min
  • Moderate (Classic)
  • Grade IV LOC less than 6 hours retrograde and
    anterograde amnesia (no axonal damage)
  • Moderate Diffuse Axonal Injury
  • Severe Diffuse Axonal Injury

41
Cerebrovascular Diseases
  • gt50 patients admitted with neuro symptoms have
    cerebrovascular diseases
  • Ischemia with or without infarction
  • Cerebrovacular Accident (CVA, Stroke Syndrome)
  • Vascular dementia
  • Hemorrhage

42
CVA
  • 500,000 people/year
  • 3rd leading cause of death in U.S.
  • Leading cause of disability in U.S.
  • 70 in persons gt65 years
  • Types
  • Thrombotic Stroke
  • TIA (symptoms clear within 24 hours)
  • Embolic stroke
  • Hemorrhagic stroke
  • Lacunar infarct

43
CVA Manifestations
  • Cerebral edema peak 72 hours, lasts 2 weeks
  • Cerebral edema is usually cause of death
  • Basilar infarcts of brain stem usually fatal
  • Symptoms vary widely depending on location
  • Sensation, Cognitive, Motor, Expressive or
    receptive aphasia, dysphagia, loss of vision,
    etc.
  • Intracranial hemorrhage
  • Onset of Excruciating headache becoming
    unresponsive
  • Headache with consciousness
  • Sudden lapse of consciousness

44
CVA Eval and TX
  • Time is Brain
  • Treatment should begin lt 6 hours
  • Hx, physical, MRA, CT, PET
  • Thrombotic
  • Anticoagulation
  • Thrombolytics
  • Vasodilation, Antioxidant therapy
  • Hemorrhagic
  • Stop bleeding
  • Reduce/Tx ICP

45
Meningitis Encephalitis
  • Meningitis infectious or toxic
  • Viral usually benign and self-limiting
  • Bacterial life threatening, may cause
    retardation in children
  • Manifestations sudden fever, headache, nucchal
    rigidity also malaise, nausea, vomiting, malaise
  • Encephalitis inflammation of parenchyma
  • Usually viral
  • Manifestations mengingeal, decreased LOC,
    seizures, focal symptoms

46
Multiple Sclerosis
  • Central patchy destruction of myelin
  • Attack and remission ? progressive deterioration
  • Manifestations
  • Sensory paresthesias, proprioception, dizziness
  • Visual diplopias, blurred
  • Spastic weakness of limbs
  • Cerebellar nystagmus, ataxia
  • Bladder hesitancy, frequency, retention
  • Mood euphoria, memory loss

47
Multiple Sclerosis
  • Tx
  • Usually aimed at symptoms
  • Episodic nature makes evaluation of treatment
    difficult
  • Most drugs anti-inflammatory or anti-immune
  • Steroids
  • Immunosuppressants
  • Diet therapy

48
Misc D/Os
  • Guillain-Barre symptoms
  • Acute ascending, progressive demyelinization
  • Precipitating events (1-3 weeks prior)
  • Mild viral or bacterial illness
  • Surgery
  • Immunizations
  • Most frequent Campylobacter jejuni
  • Negative symptoms muscle weakness/paralysis,
    decreased DTRs, loss of sensation
  • Positive symptoms pain and paresthesias

49
Misc D/Os
  • Guillain-Barre
  • Usually self limiting
  • Severity peaks at 2 weeks
  • Recovery 6 weeks to several years
  • If paralysis is severe, may require mechanical
    ventilation
  • Tx
  • Plasmapheresis decreases severity

50
Misc D/Os
  • Huntingtons Disease (aka Huntingtons Chorea)
  • Autosomal Dominant
  • Onset of disease usually late 40s early 50s
  • Insidious onset chorea cognitive loss
  • Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)
  • Progressive degeneration of motor neurons
  • Fine coordination ? gross movement ? breathing
  • 2 6 year average lifespan after dx
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com