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Antipsychotics

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Title: Antipsychotics


1
Antipsychotics
  • Actions, uses and side effects

2
Aims
  • Overview of dopamine physiology
  • Antipsychotic classifications
  • Movement disorders neuroleptic malignant
    syndrome
  • Stroke and mortality risk
  • PCF/NICE guidelines delirium challenging
    behaviour in dementia
  • Conclusions

3
Dopamine Physiology
  • Neurophysiology of dopamine underpins an
    understanding of the therapeutic uses and side
    effects of dopamine antagonists
  • Mesolimbic
  • mesocortical pathway
  • Nigrostriatal pathway
  • tubero-infundibular pathway
  • (chemoreceptor trigger zone)

4
Mesolimbic mesocortical pathways
  • Mesolimbic (midbrain limbic cortex)
  • Pleasure, motivation and reward
  • Increase in dopamine leads to positive symptoms
    of psychosis
  • Mesocortical (midbrain to prefrontal cortex)
  • Mood, cognitive function, concentration
  • Decrease in dopamine leads to negative symptoms
    of psychosis

5
Thalamic Sensory Gating
  • Arousal, motivation and attention regulated by a
    two way loop between mesolimbic/cortical systems
    and thalamus
  • Thalamus acts as a filter to allow relevant
    information through to cerebral cortex
  • gate formed by GABAergic neurones which are
    switched off by dopamine to allow salient
    information through
  • Dopamine excess leads to excessive throughput
    resulting in hallucinations and delusions

6
Nigrostriatal Pathway
  • Nigrostriatal (Substantia nigra corpus
    striatum)
  • as part of the extrapyramidal nervous system,
    controls movements
  • degenerates in Parkinsons disease
  • Blockade of D2 receptors in this pathway causes
    the drug-induced movement disorders

7
Tubero-infundibular pathway
  • Tubero-infundibular pathway (hypothalamus
    pituitary)
  • Dopamine acts on the pituitary as an inhibitor of
    prolactin secretion
  • Blockade of D2 receptors by typical
    antipsychotics and risperidone can cause
    hyperprolactinaemia
  • Other atypical antipsychotics do not cause
    sustained hyperprolactinaemia because of their
    lower affinity for D2 receptors.

8
Effect of D2 receptor antagonism
9
Classification of antipsychotics
  • Typical
  • Phenothiazines Levomepromazine, chlorpromazine,
    prochlorperazine
  • Butyrophenones Haloperidol
  • atypical
  • Aripripazole, clozapine, olanzapine, quetiapine,
    risperidone

10
Typical Vs. Atypical
  • Variation within and overlap between classes
  • ALL D2 antagonists to varying degrees
  • Variable effects on other receptors
  • Muscarinic (dry mouth, constipation etc)
  • Adrenergic (postural hypotension)
  • Histamine (drowsiness)
  • Serotoninergic (weight gain)

11
Typical Vs. Atypical
  • Atypical generally have lower affinity and
    shorter duration of D2 antagonism
  • Atypicals generally have greater seretonin
    receptor antagonism (5HT2) than D2 antagonism
  • Atypicals have greater seretonin receptor
    antagonism than typicals

12
5HT2 Antagonism
  • Serotonin regulates dopamine release in dopamine
    pathways apart from mesolimbic
  • serotonin inhibits the release of dopamine in
    those pathways
  • When serotonin receptors are blocked dopamine
    levels increase.
  • naturally occurring dopamine then fills D2
    receptors preventing blockade by the
    antipsychotic agent.
  • Less D2 blockade therefore no worsening of
    negative symptoms, less movement disorders and
    less hyperprolactanaemia (apart from risperidone)

13
Antipsychotic Receptor Affinities
  • Decreasing levels of movement disorders as you
    get lower down the list

D2 5HT2a 5HT2c 5HT3 H1 a1 a2 AChm
Haloperidol
Levomeprozine
risperidone
olanzapine
quetiapine
14
Antipsychotic Tolerability
  • Movement disorders/ extrapyramidal side effects.
    Worst haloperidol, best quetiapine.
  • Acute extrapyrimadal side effects would be
    avoided in one patient for every 3-6 patients
    treated with atypical vs. typical
  • 5 times lower risk of longer term extrapyramidal
    side effects with atypicals vs. haloperidol
  • Overall discontinuation for undesirable side
    effects are comparable

15
Movement Disorders
  • Acute Dystonia (spasms)
  • 10 of patients treated with antipsychotics
    (commoner in young adults)
  • Starts abruptly within days accompanied by
    anxiety
  • Retrocolis, torticolis, trismus, grimacing,
    tongue dysfunction, oculogyric crisis, abnormal
    positioning limbs or trunk
  • Diazepam 5mg IV (benzo) or Procyclidine 5-10mg
    IV/IM (repeat after 30 min if needed)

16
Movement Disorders
  • Acute Akathisia (motor restlessness)
  • 20 when using typical antipsychotics
  • Within days and resolves within week of stopping
  • Restless, pacing, rocking from foot to foot,
    fidgety movements, inability to sit or stand for
    a few minutes
  • Propranolol 10mg tds /- benzodiazepine

17
Movement Disorders
  • Parkinsonism
  • 30-60 on long term antipsychotics
  • Any point other than first week but more usually
    weeks to months
  • Coarse resting tremor, muscular rigidity,
    shuffling gait, sialorrhoea, bradkinesia (face)
  • procyclidine 2.5mg-5mg tds

18
Movement Disorders
  • Tardive Dyskinesia
  • 20 when using typical antipsychotics long term
    (gt 3 months or gt 1month in elderly)
  • Involuntary stereotyped chewing movements tongue
    and orofascial muscles reduced by sleep,
    torticollis, lordosis, akathesia (25)
  • Early sign inability to hold tongue out for more
    than a few seconds and worm like movements
  • Resolution 30 3 months, further 40 5 years,
    sometimes irreversible especially elderly
  • Specialist advice on treatments (tetrabenazine,
    levodopa, clonidine, baclofen, diazepam,valproate,
    pyridoxine)

19
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
  • Caused by acute dopamine depletion
  • Usually within two weeks of starting or dose
    increase of antipsychotic
  • Occurs less than 1 of patients on antipsychotics
  • Death occurs in 20 and bromocriptine halves
    mortality
  • Self limiting and resolves in 1-2 weeks if causal
    drug stopped
  • Subsequent antipsychotic use has a 30-50 chance
    of causing a reoccurance

20
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
  • Bradykinesia immobilisation akinsesia
    stupor accompanied by lead pipe rigidity, fever
    and autonomic instability
  • Essential features severe muscle rigidity,
    pyrexia /- sweating
  • Additional muteness/stupor, tachycardia, labile
    BP
  • Management stop causal drug, benzo /-
    bromocriptine, may need IVI
  • If acidosis, hypoxia, renal failure may need
    acute management/ICU

21
Other considerations
  • Stroke/All cause mortality risk
  • In dementia - Risk of stroke with olanzapine and
    risperidone 2-3 times higher than placebo
    doubling of all cause mortality with olanzapine
    (meta-analysis)
  • Increase risk in all elderly patients for both
    typicals and atypicals, greatest in those with
    dementia and within first month of starting
    treatment and with higher doses (metanalysis). (?
    Worse with typical)
  • Relative risk with individual drugs has yet to be
    determined

22
Other considerations
  • Parkinsons
  • Try and avoid antipsychotics but if needed use
    queitiapine (could try trazadone or benzo)
  • Epilepsy
  • All antipsychotics cause dose dependent reduction
    in seizure threshold. Lowest risk with
    Haloperidol

23
NICE Guidelines Delirium
  • Find and treat reversible causes
  • Use environmental factors to help keep patient
    from distress
  • If a person with delirium is distressed or
    considered a risk to themselves or others and
    verbal and non-verbal de-escalation techniques
    are ineffective or inappropriate, consider giving
    short-term (usually for 1 week or less)
    haloperidol or olanzapine.
  • Start at the lowest clinically appropriate dose
    and titrate cautiously according to symptoms.
  • antipsychotic drugs such as haloperidol and
    olanzapine should be used with caution or not at
    all for people with conditions such as
    Parkinson?s disease and/or Lewy-body dementia.

24
PCF4 Delirium
  • Delirium is distressing and associated with
    higher mortality, reduced performance status and
    increased admissions to nursing homes
  • Antipsychotics should be considered in ALL forms
    of delirium alongside environmental measures
    (including hypoactive)
  • Reduce distressing symptoms, shortened the
    duration of delirium and improved outcomes in ALL
    forms delirium (RCTs)
  • When antipsychotics alone insufficient or
    sedation needed for hyperactive/frightened
    patients benzos or trazadone can be added.

25
Nice Guidelines Dementia
  • Do not use for mild-to-moderate symptoms
  • Consider for severe symptoms (psychosis and/or
    agitated behaviour causing significant distress)
    only if
  • risks and benefits have been fully discussed
  • changes in cognition are regularly assessed and
    recorded
  • target symptoms identified and changes regularly
    assessed and recorded
  • comorbid conditions, such as depression, have
    been considered
  • drug is chosen after an individual riskbenefit
    analysis
  • start low and titrated upward
  • treatment is time limited and regularly reviewed

26
PCF4 Agitation in Dementia
  • Treat causes (inc infection/pain)
  • Environmental factors first
  • Drugs as a last resort, evidence of benefit
    modest at best and risks are significant
  • If drugs needed lowest dose for shortest period
  • Haloperidol, olanzapine, queitapine, risperidone

27
Individual Drug Properties
  bio-availability Onset Time to peak plasma concentration Half life (Hr) Duration (Hr)
Haloperidol 45-75 1hr (PO) 10-15 (SC) 2-6hr (PO) 10-20min (SC) 13-35 24
Levomepromazine 20-40 30min 1-3hr (PO) 30-90min (SC) 15-30 12-24
risperidone 99 1-2hr (PO) 24 12-48
olanzapine 60 5-8hr (PO) 34-52 12-48
quetiapine 100 1.5hr (PO) 7-14 12h
hours to days in delirium, days to weeks in
psychosis N.B all metabolised by various CP450
enzymes (liver) Reduce doses in elderly, renal
and liver impairment (generally half of usual
dose)
28
Interesting facts!
  • Haloperidol
  • Bioavailability 45-75 orally and 60-70 SC
  • ? Should reduce dose by injection
  • Liquid is odourless, colourless and tasteless
  • Prolongs QT interval
  • Plasma concentration halved by carbamazepine
  • Evidence for NV in post op and gastroenterology
    not palliative care

29
Interesting facts!
  • Levomepromazine
  • Licensed for pain!
  • Olanzapine
  • Evidence in phase 1 and phase 2 trial of efficacy
    for vomiting with moderately and highly
    emetogenic chemotherapy
  • Adversely affects diabetic control
  • Drowsiness and wt. gain most common side effects
  • Smoking can decrease plasma levels (as can
    omeprazole, carbamazepine, rifampicin)

30
Conclusions
  • Be aware of side effects and risks but keep them
    in perspective and review need to continue drugs
    regularly(be cautious but not to cautious)
  • Look out for movement disorders and dont miss
    NMS!
  • Be aware of different profiles of typicals vs
    atypicals
  • Use antipsychotics in agitated delirium, jury
    still out about hypoactive delirium (? Use
    atypicals)
  • Be cautious in dementia but not to cautious and
    if using anything use low doses and review
    regularly
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