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Pharmacology of Benzodiazepines

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Title: Pharmacology of Benzodiazepines


1
Pharmacology of Benzodiazepines
  • A Project CREATE Module

2
Benzodiazepines Outline
  • Three sections in this presentation
  • Pharmacology of benzodiazepines
  • Principles of safe prescribing
  • Benzodiazepine dependence

3
Section IPharmacology of Benzodiazepines
  • Epidemiology
  • Site of action
  • Classification
  • Metabolism elimination
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Therapeutic uses
  • Intoxication and overdose
  • Tolerance, abuse liability
  • Adverse effects

4
Epidemiology
  • 5-Aryl-14-benzodiazepine (Benzene 5-Aryl
    substituted ring)
  • One of the most commonly prescribed drugs
  • Most patients only short-term use
  • Shift towards short-acting benzos
  • Disproportionate number of prescriptions written
    for the elderly, women

5
Site of Action
  • Receptors mainly in cerebral cortex
  • Benzodiazepine receptor linked to GABA receptor
  • Benzodiazepines open chloride channel,
    potentiating GABA effects
  • GABA decreases neuronal excitation

6
Agonists, Antagonists
  • Agonist
  • Diazepam, chlordiazepoxide, lorazepam
  • Antagonist (blocks benzodazepine action)
  • Flumazenil
  • Inverse agonist (opposite effect - increased
    neuronal excitation)
  • Beta-carbolines

7
Classification by Elimination Half-Life
  • Long-acting (gt 24 hours)
  • diazepam, chlordiazepoxide, clorazepate,
    flurazepam
  • Intermediate-acting (6-24 hours)
  • oxazepam, loraxepam, ntrazepam, temazepam,
    alprazolam
  • Short-acting (lt 6 hours)
  • triazolam, midazolam

8
Metabolism and Elimination
  • Hepatic metabolism
  • des-methylation or oxidation (cytochrome P450)
  • glucuronic conjugation (oxazepam lorazepam)
  • Many have active metabolites
  • Biotransformation affected by liver disease, age,
    individual variation

9
Pharmacokinetics
  • Oral route peak plasma concentration 1-3 hours
  • Extensive protein binding
  • Lipophilic, readily cross blood-brain barrier
  • Distributed widely thoughout body

10
Therapeutic Uses
  • Anticonvulsant
  • Muscle relaxant
  • cerebral palsy, dystonia
  • Amnesia with sedation
  • peri-operative or medical procedures

1
11
Therapeutic Uses
  • Severe acute anxiety
  • Severe generalized anxiety disorder, unresponsive
    to other treatments
  • Panic disorder
  • Adjunctive treatment of depression, bipolar
    affective disorder and schizophrenia

2
12
Therapeutic UsesAlcohol Withdrawal
  • Alcohol use causes compensatory increase in
    glutamate receptors
  • Enhanced activity of glutamate when alcohol
    abruptly stopped
  • Glutamate causes neuroexcitation, leading to
    withdrawal syndrome
  • Benzodiazepines cause neuroinhibition

1
13
Therapeutic Uses Alcohol Withdrawal
  • Diazepam 20 mg PO every 1-2 hours until symptoms
    abate
  • Long half-life covers duration of withdrawal - no
    need for take-home doses
  • If history of withdrawal seizures 20 mg PO q1-2
    H for at least three doses
  • If elderly, severe liver disease use lorazepam
    1-2 mg SL q2-4 H

2
14
Intoxication
  • Resembles alcohol intoxication
  • Sedation, slurred speech, drowsiness, agitation
  • Disinhibition and rage

15
Overdose
  • Sedation
  • Respiratory depression if alcohol or other CNS
    depressants
  • Can be fatal if given IV
  • Treat with Flumazenil (but causes seizures)

16
Tolerance
  • Sedative and sleep-inducing effects diminish
    after several weeks
  • Anxiolytic effects persist over time
  • Alcohol and other sedatives cause cross-tolerance

17
Abuse Liability
  • Potency as reinforcer
  • Rapid entry into the brain
  • rapid GI absorption
  • lipophilic
  • High intrinsic pharmacological activity

18
Adverse Effects
  • Depression
  • Falls (including hip fractures), confusion in
    elderly
  • Motor vehicle accidents especially early in
    therapy

1
19
Adverse Effects
  • Decreased respiratory drive
  • Floppy baby syndrome
  • Disinhibition
  • Rebound insomnia
  • occurs after 3 weeks of continuous therapy
  • vivid dreams, fitful sleep

2
20
Section IIBenzodiazepines - Principles of Safe
Prescribing
  • Assessment and management of anxiety
  • Assessment and management of insomnia
  • Alternatives to benzodiazepines
  • Prescribing precautions

21
Assessment of Anxiety
  • Psychiatric causes
  • panic disoder, obsessive-compulsive disorder,
    mixed depression/anxiety
  • Organic causes
  • dementia, cardiorespiratory, hyperthyroidism
  • Psychosocial causes
  • work and family difficulties, abuse

22
Management of AnxietyNon-pharmacologic
Approaches
  • Cognitive/behavioural therapies
  • Progressive muscle relaxation,deep breathing
  • Counselling for psychosocial issues
  • Lifestyle changes
  • exercise
  • adequate sleep
  • avoid excess coffee and alcohol
  • modify work and other responsibilities
  • spend more time with family and friends

23
Assessment of Insomnia
  • Sleep history
  • sleep pattern, timining of difficulty, bedtime
    activities
  • Physical causes
  • medications, cardiorespiratory conditions, sleep
    apnea, restless legs syndrome, prostatism,
    chronic pain
  • Mood disorders
  • Alcohol and drug use

24
Management of InsomniaSleep Hygiene
  • Avoid excess alcohol, coffee, cola
  • Exercise regularly
  • Dont overeat before bed
  • Use bedroom for sleep sex only
  • If trouble sleeping, get up, do something else
    for 15-20 minutes
  • Dont take daytime naps or go to sleep before
    9-10 pm

25
Alternatives to Benzodiazepines
  • Buspirone
  • non-addicting
  • as effective as diazepam
  • takes several weeks to work
  • will not help benzodiazepine withdrawal

1
26
Alternatives to Benzodiazepines
  • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
  • panic disorder
  • mixed anxiety/depression
  • obsessive compulsive disorder
  • Other sedatives (chloral hydrate, tricyclic
    antidepressants, Zopiclone)

2
27
Prescribing Precautions
  • Alcohol and drug use
  • COPD, sleep apnea
  • Psychiatric disorders
  • depression
  • personality disorders
  • schizophrenia

1
28
Prescribing Precautions
  • Use caution in prescribing with other
    psychoactive drugs
  • two benzodiazepines together
  • benzodiazepine plus barbiturates, opioids,
    antidepressants
  • Warn patient about
  • combining with alcohol and other drugs
  • driving (until tolerant to sedative effects)

2
29
Prescribing Precautions
  • Use caution with benzodiazepines that have a high
    dependence liability
  • diazepam, lorazepam, alprazolam, triazolam
  • Avoid long-acting benzodiazepines in the elderly
  • diazepam, chlordiazepoxide, flurazepam
  • Prescribe for no more than three weeks
  • Give periodic drug holidays

3
30
Section IIIBenzodiazepine Dependence
  • Prevalence
  • Diagnostic criteria
  • General management
  • Withdrawal
  • Benzodiazepine tapering

31
Benzodiazepine Dependence
  • Not common
  • Greater risk in patients dependent on other drugs
  • Physical dependence does not necessarily mean
    psychological dependence

32
Benzodiazepine Dependence DSM-IV Criteria
  • Three or more of the following in a 12 month
    period
  • frequently take larger dose than intended
  • withdrawal with cessation of the drug
  • great deal of time spent using and acquiring the
    drug
  • neglect of major activities because of drug use
  • continued use despite knowledge of physical or
    social harm

33
Management ofBenzodiazepine Dependence
  • Benzodiazepine tapering
  • Alcohol and drug treatment program
  • Mutual aid groups
  • Alternate strategies for managing anxiety
  • buspirone, SSRIs
  • psychotherapy, cognitive therapy

34
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Chronic use leads to down-regulation of GABA
  • Neuronal hyperexcitability if BZD abruptly
    stopped
  • Severity of withdrawal related to
  • dose, duration, high intrinsic activity
  • short half-life, rapid exit from brain

1
35
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Can occur even with therapeutic doses when given
    for two months or more
  • Onset 1-2 days (short-acting), 2-4 days
    (long-acting)
  • Peak at 5-7 days
  • May last several weeks
  • May be subacute, prolonged withdrawal

2
36
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Two groups of symptoms
  • anxiety-related symptoms (irritability, insomnia,
    panic attacks, poor concentration)
  • neurologic (tinnitus, blurry vision,
    dysperceptions, depersonalization)
  • Note Suicidal ideation can occur in patients
    with mixed anxiety and depression

3
37
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Withdrawal should be distinguished from
  • rebound anxiety (temporary intensification of
    anxiety after abrupt cessation)
  • symptom recurrence

4
38
Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
  • Abrupt cessation of doses above 50 mg
    diazepam/day or the equivalent can result in
    seizures, psychosis or delirium

5
39
Benzodiazepine Tapering
  • Try slowly tapering patients on long-term
    benzodiazepines, even if they are not dependent.
    Possible benefits
  • more alert, energetic better able to make
    positive life changes not need drug anymore
    avoid future adverse effects
  • Wait until a treatment plan is in place
  • Provide regular support
  • Stop or reverse taper if patient becomes worse

40
Benzodiazepines Outpatient Tapering
  • Convert to equivalent dose of diazepam (except in
    elderly, liver disease)
  • Taper over 6-12 weeks (2-5 mg /wk)
  • May need to slow taper at doses lt 20 mg
  • Be cautious about equivalent doses
  • Use scheduled rather than PRN doses
  • Alprazolam, triazolam taper with these agents

41
Benzodiazepine Equivalence to5 mg Diazepam
  • Bromazepam (Lectopam) 3
  • Chlordiazepoxide (Librium) 10-25
  • Clonazepam (Rivotril) 0.5
  • Clorazepate (Tranxene) 7.5
  • Flurazepam (Dalmane) 15
  • Lorazepam (Ativan) 0.5 - 1
  • Nitrazepam (Mogadon) 5-10
  • Oxazepam (Serax) 15
  • Temazepam (Restoril) 10-15
  • Alprazolam 0.5
  • Triazolam 0.25

42
Inpatient Diazepam Tapering
  • Typical daily use over past 2 months is
    equivalent to diazepam 80-100 mg or more
  • Heavy use of barbiturates, alcohol, other drugs
  • Elderly patients
  • Patients with illnesses that may make tapering
    more dangerous, e.g., serious heart disease

43
High Dose Benzodiazepine Withdrawal Above 80-100
mg Diazepam/Day
  • Hospitalization, addiction consult
  • Start at 1/2 - 2/3 the equivalent diazepam dose
    (except alprazolam, triazolam)
  • Taper by 5-15 mg per day (no more than 10 of
    daily dose)
  • May switch to outpatient protocol at doses less
    than 80 mg
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