Term
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Definition
TCA; Tertiary amine
Mechanism: Inhibit uptake of NE and 5-HT; also block muscarinic, adrenergic and histamine receptors
Pharmacokinetics: amitriptyline (elavil) and imipramine (tofranil) are broken down to active metabolites (secondary amines)
Uses: Depression, panic disorder, fibromyalgia, enuresis, ADHD
Effects: CNS = drowsiness and sedation, impairment of memory and cognition, analgesia; PNS = cardiac depression and increased irritability (torsade de pointes and other arrhythmias) and A1 blockade (postural hypotension, dizziness)
Side effects: decrease seizure threshold, SIADH, sexual dysfunction, tolerance, muscle aches/malaise if stopped rapidly;
Safe in pregnancy
OD: dangerous, depressed may be suicidal, cardiac (torsade de pointes), hypotension, seizures.
Drug interactions: w/MAOI = serotonin syndrome; Fluoxetine and other SSRIs compete for metabolism, TCAs can reach toxic levels
Other drugs:
Imipramine (Tofranil®) - Standard of efficacy in depression; enuresis
Trimipramine (Surmontil®): Doxepine (Sinequan®)
Clomipramine (Anafranil®)- only for OCD, works like SSRI
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Term
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Definition
TCA; Secondary amine
Mechanism: Inhibit uptake of NE and 5-HT; also block muscarinic, adrenergic and histamine receptors
Uses: Depression, panic disorder, fibromyalgia, enuresis, ADHD
Pharmacokinetics: active metabolites
Effects: CNS = drowsiness and sedation, impairment of memory and cognition, analgesia; PNS = cardiac depression and increased irritability (torsade de pointes and other arrhythmias) and A1 blockade (postural hypotension, dizziness); Nortiptyline = least cardiac effects
Side effects: decrease seizure threshold, SIADH, sexual dysfunction, tolerance, muscle aches/malaise if stopped rapidly;
Safe in pregnancy
OD: dangerous, depressed may be suicidal, cardiac (torsade de pointes), hypotension, seizures.
Drug interactions: w/MAOI = serotonin syndrome; Fluoxetine and other SSRIs compete for metabolism, TCAs can reach toxic levels
Other drugs: Desipramine (Norpramin®) - worst for cardiac depression; Protriptyline (Vivactil®)
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Term
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Definition
MAOI: Antidepressant
Mechanism: MAOIs irreversibly inhibit MAO which breaks down circulating catecholamines; MAO-A breaks down NE and 5-HT, MAO-B breaks down DA;
Pharmacokinetics: effect lasts 1-3 weeks since MAO inhibition is irreversible
Drug of last choice; question will say "pt has been treated for depression for a long time and is given this now"
Foods to avoid: red wine, beer, aged cheese and prepared meats; alcohol, bean curd, aged cheese, smoked, fermented picled herring, spoiled meat and fish, ginseng, protein extract, sausage, bologna, pepperoni and salami sauerkraut, soups, yeat, brewere's or extracts;
Other drugs: Tranylcypromine (Parnate®)
Side effects: HTN crisis
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Term
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Definition
SSRI
Fluoxetine may cause insomnia so take in AM
Use: DOC depression, Panic disorder, OCD, bulimia, alcoholism, children and teenagers
Pharmacokinetics: bound to plasma proteins, long lasting = fluoxetine T1/2 = 2-3 days, norfluoxetine (active metabolite)= 7-9 days
Side effects: GI, weight loss, CNS stim (fluoxetine), Sexual dysfunction, SIADH -> hyponatremia, photosensitivity
Drug interactions: Big for drug interactions; Metabolized by CYP-450, inhibits CYP3A4 and CYP2D6; MAOIS, St. Johns Wort or amphetamines = serotonin syndrome; TCAs increased; Warfarin increased; phenytoin or carbamazepin increased; B-blockers increased; opioid active metabolite conversion DECREASED; Tramadol = increased seizures; tamoxifen = decreased metabolism of pro drug to active compound (CA drug)
Other Drugs: Fluvoxamine (Luvox®)
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Term
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Definition
SNRI
Uses: Depression
Mechanism: inhibits 5-HT and NE reuptake
Adverse effects: increased BP, SIADH, GI, dizziness, nervousnes, abnormal ejaculation/orgasm, asthenia
Other drugs: Desvenlafaxine (Pritiq®)
Duloxetine (Cymbalta®)- better in depression than SSRIs; may be hepatotoxic, contraindicated for liver disease pts; contraindicated in third trimester of pregnancy
Milnacipran (Savella) - fibromyalgia
Levomilnacipran (Fetzima)- Major depressive disorder
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Term
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Definition
Antidepressant
Uses: antidepressant, childhood ADHD, recovery from drug of EtOH abuse or weight loss (decreases cravings)
Mechanism: inhibits reuptake of DA and NE
Side effects: CNS stim, psychois, headache, nausea, weight loss, NOT sexual dysfunction, seizures at high doses
Contraindications: pts with seizures or on drugs that lower seizure threshold (TCAs or antipsychotics)
Other Drugs: Mirtazapine (Remeron®)
Atomoxetine (Strattera)- Inhibit NE reuptake only; ADHD (non-stimulant)
Maprotiline (Ludiomil®)
Amoxapine (Asendin®)- depression, schizophrenia, DA antagnist, may cause parkinson syndrom
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Term
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Definition
Mechanism: Blocks presynaptic A2 which normally ihibits release of NE and 5-HT; increases release of NE and 5-HT;
block 5-HT2A and 5-HT3 receptors, eliminating normal side effects of SSRIs (anxiety, insomnia, nausea, sex dysfunction)
Blocks histamine receptors causing drowsiness, advantage in insomnia |
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Term
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Definition
Antidepressant
Uses: Depression, sleep aid, pain management
Side effects: sedation, dizziness, hypotension, nausea, priapism (rare, but you see priapism, ALWAYS TRAZADONE)
Mechanism: partial 5-HT1A agonist and may block 5-HT2A receptor |
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Term
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Definition
Antidepressant
Drug interactions: MAOI, SSRI, TCA, L-dopa or selegiline (serotonin syndrome); may prolong general anesthetics
decreases effectiveness of digoxin, warfarin, theophylline, cyclosporine, antiretroviral protease inhibitors and oral contraceptives
Mechanism: UNKNOWN but may block reuptake of NE, 5HT and maybe DA |
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