CNS Pharmacology: Abebe Ejigu Departmenet of Pharmacology
CNS Pharmacology: Abebe Ejigu Departmenet of Pharmacology
CNS Pharmacology: Abebe Ejigu Departmenet of Pharmacology
Abebe Ejigu
Departmenet of Pharmacology
1
CNS
CNS- brain and the spinal cord
Semi-liquid structure at body temperature
Excitable tissues and glial cells
Brain is sensitive structure and protected by Blood Brain Barrier
(BBB)
Oxygen, glucose, and other small non-polar are molecules that cross the barrier
BBB is the major challenge for drug delivery to brain
Receptors in the CNS
Kinase linked receptors :
Eg. cytokine, insulin Rs
Nuclear receptors
Eg. Steroid R
Channels
Voltage gated channels (metabotropic) -GPCRs
Eg. Muscarnic Ach R
Ligand gated channels (ionotropic)
Eg. Nicotinic Ach, GABAA Rs
Types of post synaptic receptors / neurons
A. Excitatory neurons
1. Opening of Na channels (influx of Na+ )
2. Depressed Cl- influx or K+ efflux or both
• Influx of Na+ ion, inhibition of K+ ion conductance and Cl-
ion channel opening causes increased positively inside
postsynaptic neuron
3. Changes in internal metabolism of the postsynaptic neuron to
excite cell activity or by increasing excitatory membrane
receptors / decrease inhibitory membrane receptors
B. Inhibitory neurons
1. Opening of Cl- channels (Influx of Cl- ion )
2. Increase conductance of K+ ions (efflux of K+)
• Influx of Cl- ion and efflux of K+ ion causes
increased negativity inside postsynaptic neuron
3. Activation of enzymes which inhibit cellular metabolic
functions and increase inhibitory synaptic receptors
or decrease excitatory receptors
The basic processes of synaptic transmission in the
CNS are essentially similar to those operating in the
periphery
The release of neurotransmitters (NTs) and
receptor binding
Recognition of the NT by membrane receptors
triggers intracellular changes
NT release regulation (presynaptic receptors)
Removal of NT from the synaptic cleft
NTs in the CNS / inhibitory or excitatory
Inhibitory : GABA, Glycine
Excitatory : Glutamate, Aspartate
Others
Monoamines: DA, NE and 5-HT
Ach
Neuropeptides (e.g. sub-P,enkephalins)
Purine nucleotides (adenosine, ATP)
GABA
Major inhibitory AA in the mammalian CNS
Reduced function/amount of GABA will cause
excessive stimulation
seizure
Synthesized from glutamate by the action of glutamic
acid decarboxylase
Linked to chloride channel opening
Hyperpolarization
Types of GABA receptors
GABAA
AP in presynaptic fiber
Alteringsynthesis,
storage,metabolism,release,
reuptake,degradation and
binding site of NT
Receptor-induced increase
or decrease in ionic
conductance
Drugs that acts on CNS can :-
Selectively relieve pain
Suppress disordered movement
Induce sleep or arousal
Antiemetic effect
Treat anxiety, depression, schizophrenia,
Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy,
migraine, etc.
General Anesthetics (GA)
24
Comparing features of general & local anesthesia
GA LA
Site of action CNS PNS
Area of body involved Whole body Restricted area
Consciousness lost Maintained
Care for vital functions Essential Not needed
25
Triad of general anaesthesia (GA)
Hypnosis
26
Death
Coma
Hypnosis
sedation
Amnesia
Awake
27
General anesthetics (GA)
Depress CNS to the extent that permit performance of
surgery & other noxious/unpleasant procedures
Physiologic state induced by GA
Analgesia
Amnesia
Loss of consciousness
Inhibition of sensory & autonomic reflexes
Skeletal muscle relaxation
28
The extent of effects depends on
The drug
The dosage
Clinical situation
Phases of GA
Induction
Maintenance
Recovery
29
Property of an Ideal anesthetic
1. For patient
Pleasant, non-irritant, not cause nausea, vomiting &
with wide margin of safety
Fast induction & recovery without after effect
2. For the surgeon
Adequate analgesia, immobility and muscle relaxation
3. For the anesthetist
Easy administration, controllable and versatile
30
Stages of anesthesia (’’Guedel's signs’’ )
1. Analgesia
Initially analgesia, finally both analgesia & amnesia
2. Excitement/delirium
delirious and excited
3. Surgical anesthesia
change in ocular movements, eye reflexes, & pupil size
4. Medullary depression/paralysis
cessation of spontaneous breathing
severe depression of the vasomotor center in the
medulla
31
Mechanism of action of GA
Mechanism of action is not precisely known
• Unreactive compounds produce narcotic effects(eg.
xenon)
• lipid theory : potency correlated with lipid solubility
(Overton-Meyer correlation)- unitary theory
• Effect on ion channels: recent theory
Interaction with ligand-gated membrane ion
channels
32
Most anaesthetics enhance activity of inhibitory
GABAA receptors, and inhibit activation of excitatory
receptors such as glutamate and nAch receptors
However individual anaesthetics differ in their
actions and affect cellular function in several
different ways
Therefore, unitary theory is n’t sufficient
33
Halogenated hydrocarbons
Activation of K+channel
Enhance GABA effect
Nitrous oxide and Ketamine
Don’t affect GABA or glycine gated Cl- channel
Selectively inhibit excitatory NMDA type of
glutamate receptor
NMDA mainly gates Ca 2+ selective cation channel in
neurons
34
1. Inhaled anesthetics (gases or volatile liquids)
Desflurane Enflurane
Sevoflurane Halothane
Isoflurane Ethoxyflurane
(Most commonly used) Nitrous oxide
Diethyl ether
Xenon
35
36
Pharmacokinetics of inhalational anaesthetics
37
Main factors that determine the speed of induction and
recovery of inhalational anesthetic
Properties of the anaesthetic
solubility in blood (blood:gas partition coefficient)
Partial pressure of anesthetics
lipid solubility (oil:gas partition coefficient)
Physiological factors
Alveolar ventilation rate
Cardiac output (CO)
Low solubility in blood - high parial pressure = fast induction and recovery
Numbers indicate blood:gas partition coefficient
39
40
Rapid induction and recovery allowing flexible
control over the depth of anaesthesia
Speed of induction and recovery determined by
Solubility in blood
Solubility in fat (lipid solubility)
Low solubility in blood produce rapid induction and
recovery (e.g. nitrous oxide, desflurane)
High solubility in blood - slow induction and
recovery (e.g.halothane)
High lipid solubility (e.g. halothane) accumulate
gradually in body
41
General actions of inhaled anesthetics
Respiration
Depressed respiration and response to CO2
Kidney
Depression of renal blood flow and urine output
Muscle
High concentrations will relax skeletal muscle
42
CVS
Generalized reduction in arterial pressure and
peripheral vascular resistance
CNS
Increased cerebral blood flow and decreased cerebral
metabolism
Liver
Conc-dependent decrease in hepatic blood flow
permanent changes in liver enzyme function are rare
43
Toxicity
Hepatotoxicity ( associated with halothane)
Nephrotoxicity
Malignant hyperthermia
Mutagenicity
Carcinogenicity
Hematotoxicity
44
Individual inhalation anaesthetics
Halothane (widely used)
Potent, non-explosive and non-irritant,
hypotensive
‘Hangover' likely, due to high lipid solubility
Risk of liver damage if used repeatedly
45
Nitrous oxide
Odorless and colorless
Low potency, therefore must be combined with other
agents
Rapid induction and recovery
Good analgesic properties
Risk of bone marrow depression with prolonged
administration
46
Enflurane
Halogenated anaesthetic similar to halothane
Less metabolism than halothane , therefore less risk of
toxicity
Faster induction and recovery than halothane (less
accumulation in fat)
Some risk of epilepsy-like seizures
Isoflurane
Similar to enflurane but lacks epileptogenic property
May precipitate myocardial ischemia in patients with
coronary disease
Irritant to respiratory tract
47
Desflurane
Similar to isoflurane but with faster onset and
recovery
Respiratory irritant, so liable to cause coughing and
laryngospasm
Sevoflurane
Similar to desflurane with lack of respiratory
irritation
48
Ether
Obsolete except where modern facilities are not
available
Easy to administer and control
Slow onset and recovery, with postoperative nausea
and vomiting
Analgesic and muscle relaxant properties
Highly explosive
Irritant to respiratory tract
49
2. Intravenous anesthetics
Barbiturates (eg, thiopental, methohexital)
Propofol
Ketamine
Etomidate
Dexmedetomidine
50
I.V.
anaesthetics have faster onset of action than the
most rapid inhaled agents (eg. desflurane and
sevoflurane)
Used for induction of general anesthesia
Rapid
recovery (but not propofol) and used for short
ambulatory (outpatient) surgical procedures
51
Thiopental
(barbiturate)
High lipid solubility
Rapid action due to rapid
transfer across BBB
Short duration due to
redistribution
Redistribution of thiopental
after an intravenous bolus administration
52
Thiopental
Slowly metabolised and liable to accumulate in body fat
Single
dose produces only a brief period of
unconsciousness (rapid removal from brain)
No analgesic effect
Adverse effects
Narrow margin between anaesthetic dose and dose
causing cardiovascular depression
Risk of severe vasospasm if accidentally injected into
artery
53
Etomidate
Similar to thiopental but more quickly metabolised
Causes minimal cardiovascular and respiratory
depression(compared to other i.v.anesthetics)
Used for induction of anesthesia in patients with
limited cardiovascular reserve
Minimal hypotension even in elderly patients with
poor cardiovascular reserve
54
Adverse effects
Pain on injection
Postoperative nausea and vomiting
Prolonged use may cause suppresses of adrenal
steroids production
(not to be used for patients with adrenal insufficiency)
Prolonged infusion to critically ill patients may result
in
Hypotension and electrolyte imbalance
Oliguria b/c of its adrenal suppressive effects
55
Propofol
Rapidly metabolized / rapid recovery with out hangover
Patients
are able to ambulate earlier after general
anesthesia
less postoperative nausea and vomiting
useful for day case surgery
For induction and maintenance of anesthesia as part of
total intravenous or balanced anesthesia
Effective to induce prolonged sedation for patients in
critical care settings (prolonged infusion )
56
ketamine
MoA:
may involve blockage of glutamate on
NMDA receptor subtype
The only i.v anesthetic with analgesic & dose-
related cardiovascular stimulation effects
Cardiovascular effects via
Stimulating central sympathetic nervous system
To some extent by inhibiting the reuptake of NE
Slow onset of action (2-5 minutes)
57
Increases cerebral blood flow, oxygen consumption, &
intracranial pressure
Causes dissociative anesthesia (patient may remain
conscious)
58
3. Balanced anesthesia
Combination of i.v and inhaled anesthetics
i.v.( induction of anesthesia)
inhaled (maintenance of anesthesia)
Muscle relaxants used to facilitate tracheal intubation
and optimize surgical conditions
Local anesthetics provide perioperative analgesia
Potent opioid analgesics and cardiovascular drugs
(eg, β-blockers, α2 agonists, Ca 2+ channel blockers)
59
Preanesthetic
Anesthetic adjuncts medications
Benzodiazepines – Anticholinergics
Analgesics – Anxiolytics
Neuromuscular – Antiemetics
60
Local anaesthetics (LAs)
61
Coca leaves used to be chewed for numbing effect
they produced on mouth and tongue
The leaves contains cocaine
Cocaine was the 1st local anaesthetic proposed for
surgical procedures
Sigmund Freud studied cocaine's physiological actions
Carl Koller introduced cocaine as ophthalmic
anesthetic
Chronic use of cocaine is associated with
62
Chemistry of LAs
63
64
nk Lipophilic Ester Amine
r li group bond substituents
st e
E
Cocaine
Procaine
Tetracaine
Benzocaine
65
k
lin
id
Am
Lidocaine
Ropivacaine
Mepivacaine
Bupivicaine
Prilocaine
66
Ester links prone to hydrolysis in plasma or
tissue by non-specific esterases & have short
duration of action
Amide links are more stable & have longer
plasma half lives
LAs are weak bases with pKa values mainly
in the range 8-9
Ionized at physiological pH (but not
completely)
67
Relative proportion of the ionized and
unionized forms determined by pKa of the LA
and pH of the body fluid
Cationic form is the most active at receptor
site
The receptor for LAs is not readily
accessible from the external side of the cell
membrane
Therefore , Unionized form is important for
rapid penetration of axonal membranes
68
As the LA needs to penetrate the nerve sheath and the
axon membrane to reach the inner end of the sodium
channel, activity
Increased at alkaline pH /↑unionized form/
Reduced at acid pH /↑cationic form /
69
Pharmacokinetics (ADME)
Absorption of LA determined by
– Dosage
– Site of injection
– Drug-tissue binding
– Local blood flow
– Presence of vasoconstrictors
– Physicochemical property of the drug
70
Epinephrineinhibit release of substance P & reduce
sensory neuron firing by acting on ά2 AR
Therefore,
it enhances and prolongs local anesthetic
induced spinal anesthesia
Vasoconstrictors are less effective in prolonging
anesthetic action of the more lipid-soluble, long-acting
drugs (eg, bupivacaine and ropivacaine)
May be due to highly tissue-bound
Cocaine has unique intrinsic sympathomimetic
activity
71
Distribution
Amides well distributed
Initial distribution to highly perfused organs (Brain ,
heart, kidney, liver)
72
Metabolism
73
Amide metabolism depends on
• Liver disease & hepatic blood flow
• Competition for the same enzyme
Toxicity from amide type LAs is more likely to occur
in patients with hepatic disease
Reduced hepatic blood flow decreased hepatic
elimination of LAs
volatile anesthetics reduce liver blood flow
74
Excretion
• Acidification of urine promotes ionization of the
tertiary amine base to the more water-soluble charged
form
• more readily excreted
• Unionized form diffuse readily through lipid
membranes, little/no urinary excretion of the neutral
form occurs
75
Mechanism of action
LAs block voltage-gated Na+ channel
• Na+ channel function alteration
– Batrachotoxin, veratridine and scorpion venoms
• Prevent inactivation
– Tetradotoxin and saxitoxin
• Block Na channel near the extracellular region
– Local anesthetics
• Bind the intracellular component of the channel
76
LAs block the initiation & propagation of action
potentials by preventing the voltage-dependent
increase in Na+ conductance
Use dependent effect
Cationic form of LA is able to interact with the
receptor only when the channel is open
No significant affinity for resting channels
LAs prolong inactive state of the channel & it will
take longer time for recovery
Refractory period of the fibre increased
77
Higher Ca2+ concentration reduce inactivation of Na+
channel & lowers LA effects
K+ increases the activity of LA
78
Mechanism of action
Axonal
membrane
LA receptor Axoplasm
B BH+
Activation ( ‘m’) gate near to extra cellular part; inactivation( ‘h’ ) gate at intracellular part
B, unionized LA; BH+ , ionized LA
LAs act on activated or inactivated state of the channel
79
Use and techniques of LAs
1. Topical /surface anaesthesia
Applied to mucus membrane & abraded skin
Only superficial layer is anaesthetized
Onset & duration of action depends on the site, the drug,
conc.,& form
Typically are used LAs; tetracaine (2%), lidocaine (2% to
10%) & cocaine (1% to 4%)
Dosage form could be
Drops, ointment, cream, spray, suspension,
suppository
81
2. Infiltration anesthesia
Dilute solution of LA is infiltrated under the skin in
the area of operation - block sensory nerve endings
Duration of action can be approximately doubled by
adding epinephrine to the injection solution
Epinephrine-containing solutions should not be
injected into tissues supplied by end arteries (Eg. ears,
nose, penis, fingers & toes)
vasoconstriction may cause gangrene
Commonly used; lidocaine (0.5% to 1%), procaine
(0.5% to 1%) & bupivacaine (0.125% to 0.25
82
3. Conduction block
3.1.Field block anaesthesia
Injecting LA subcutaneously so that all nerves
coming to a particular field are blocked
Used in case of appendicectomy,dental procedure,
scalp stitching, operation of forearms & legs, etc
83
3. Conduction block
3.2.Nerve block anaesthesia
Injecting LA into or about individual peripheral nerves
or nerve plexuses
Blockade of mixed peripheral nerves & nerve plexuses
anesthetizes somatic motor nerves
producing skeletal muscle relaxation & is essential for
some surgical procedures
Produces greater areas of anesthesia than the topical &
infltiration anaesthesia do
84
4. Spinal Anesthesia
Injection of LA into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in
85
CNS effects
All LAs produce sequence of stimulation followed by
depression
Initial stimulation is due to inhibition of inhibitory
NTs & at high dose all neurons are inhibited
Cociane is powerful full CNS stimulant causing the
following effects in sequence
Euphoria/excitement--mental confusion--convulsion--
unconsciousness--respiratory depression--death
Effect is concentration dependent
86
Procaine & other synthetic LAs
Produce little CNS effects at safe clinical dose
Higher dose produce CNS stimulation followed by
depression
Lidocaine
Initially causes drowsiness & lethargy
At higher dose it produces excitation followed by
depression
87
Toxicity
Two major forms of LAs toxicity
1. Systemic effects
• CNS
• CVS
• Hematological
• Allergic reactions from p-aminobenzoic acid derivatives
(ester link LAs metabolite)
2. Direct neurotoxicity from the local effects
• At high concentration
88
Sedative Hypnotics
Anxiety
Anxiety is unpleasant state of tension, apprehension, uneasiness
Normal fear to response threating stimuli Includes several
components
Defensive behaviors
Autonomic reflexes
Arousal and alertness
Corticosteroid secretion and negative emotions
The distinction b/n pathological and normal state of
anxiety……...????
The anxiety disorder could be
Generalized anxiety disorder / with out clear reason/
Panic disorder / fear occurs in association with
somatic symptoms (tachycardia, sweating palpitation,
etc )
Obsessive-Compulsive disorder (OCD)
Eg. Fear for exposure to germs (obsession) and repetitive action
such as hand washing many times (compulsions)
Phobia /strong fear for specific things/
Post–traumatic stress disorder /recalling past stressful
experiences/
Treatment should involve psychological rather than
or in addition to drug treatment
Drugs
Sedative / hypnotics
Some times
Antipsychotic and antidepressant drugs
A. Effective sedative
Reduces anxiety with out inducing sleep
Some decrease motor activity
CNS depression should be minimal
Quicker onset, shorter duration, steeper dose response
curve
B. Effective Hypnotic
More CNS depression , induce & maintain sleep
The sleep should resemble natural one
Slow acting drugs with flatter dose response curve
93
Sedation hypnosis general anesthesia
(increased grades of CNS depression)
Hypnotics
At lower dose may act as sedative and
At higher dose can produce general anesthesia
but BZDs do not
Sedative Hypnotics
A= Barbiturates
B= BZD
Clinical Uses of Sedative-Hypnotics
To relief anxiety
For insomnia
For sedation and amnesia before & during medical and
surgical procedures
Treatment of epilepsy and seizure states
As a component of balanced anesthesia
To control ethanol/other sedative-hypnotic
withdrawal states
For muscle relaxation in specific neuromuscular
disorders
As diagnostic aids or for treatment in psychiatry
Insomnia is difficulty in falling asleep or maintaining sleep,
premature awakening and/or lacking refreshment from sleep
Non-pharmacologic therapies for sleep problems
Proper diet and exercise
Avoiding stimulants before bed time
Ensuring a comfortable sleeping environment
Retiring at a regular time each night
Drug treatment of insomnia – hypnotics
Classification of sedative-hypnotics
1. Barbiturates
2. Benzodiazepines
3. Older sedative/hypnotics
4. New sedative/hypnotics
5. Other drugs
1. Barbiturates
Long acting: Phenobarbitone
Short acting: butobarbitone and pentobarbitone
Ultrashort: Thiopentone, methohexitone
All have CNS depressant activity
Produce dose dependent effects
Side effects
dizziness, nausea, headache, but not sedation or loss
of coordination
less troublesome than with benzodiazepines
5. Other drugs that induce sedation
Antihistaminics (promethazine / diphenhydramaine)
Neuroleptics / antidepressant (chlorpromazine,amitryline)
Opoids (morphine, pethidine)
They have significant sedation effect but not reliable for treatment of
insominia
β-adrenoceptor antagonists (e.g. propranolol ) to treat some
forms of anxiety (for physical symptoms such as sweating,
tremor and tachycardia)
block of peripheral sympathetic responses
‘ ….actors and musicians to reduce the symptoms of stage fright’
Propranolol produces insominia as a side effect
Analgesics
Pain (algesia)
Unpleasant sensory & emotional experience
Associated with actual or potential tissue
damage
Evoked by an external or internal noxious
stimuli
Mediated by different NTs & peptides such
as glutamate & substance P
It is a warning, primarily protective in nature
The pain can be
Superficial
- Stimulation of skin & mucous membranes
- Fast response
Deep
- Arises from muscles, joints, tendons, heart, e.t.c
- Slow response
Classification
Physiological Clinical
– Nociceptive
– Acute
– Neuropathic
– Chronic
– Psychological
– Malignant
‘Nociceptive’
Normal physiology (mechanisms known)
Treated with conventional analgesics (NSAIDs,
acetaminophen, opioids)
‘Neuropathic’
Aberrant physiology (mechanisms unknown)
Associated with neural damage
Difficult to treat
Pathopysiology of pain
Perception
Analgesics
Drugs that selectively relieve pain with out
significant change on patient consciousness
Act on CNS or periphery pain mechanism
Analgesic classification
1. Narcotics /opioids/
Morphine & morphine like drugs
2. Non-narcotics
NSAID
3. Adjuvant analgesic /coanalgesics
TCAs, Antiepileptics, Steroids
Management of pain
1. Mild pain
NSAID + adjuvant
2. Moderate pain
Weak narcotic + NSAID + adjuvant
3. Severe pain
Strong narcotic + NSAID + adjuvant
Opioids analgesics
Opium: a mixture of alkaloids from seed capsule
of opium poppy
Most opioid analgesics are related to morphine
morphine has 5 rings, 3- & 6-OH groups (phenolic &
alcoholic), piperidine ring with N-methyl group
Codeine is morphine O-methylated at position 3
Heroin is morphine O-acetylated at positions 3 & 6
Replacing the N-methyl with something larger
(allyl, cyclopropyl, cyclobutyl) produces opioid
with antagonist properties
Meperidine (pethidine) is a synthetic opioid with
only fragments of the morphine structure
Opiates Opioid receptor
subtypes
• Pure agonists • μ (mu)
• Partial agonists • Κ (kapa)
• Mixed agonist- • δ (delta)
antagonists • σ (sigma)( ?)
All belong to the family of
GPCRs
132
μ (mu) receptor
Supraspinal analgesia
Euphoria
Respiratory depression, constipation, urinary
retention, nausea, vomiting, physical depende
nce, miosis
Most opioid analgesics are relatively selective μ o
pioid agonists
δ (delta) receptor
Spinal analgesia
Nausea & vomiting
К (kapa) receptor
Spinal analgesia
Sedation
Miosis
Opiate receptor interactions
Drugs Receptor
mu kappa delta sigma
Full agonists
Morphine +++ ++ +
Fentanyl ++++ +
Alfentanil +++ ?
Sufentanil +++++ +
Hydromorphone +++ ++
Methadone +++ ++
Meperidine ++ ++
Codeine +
Levorphanol +++ ++?
Opiate receptor interactions
Receptor
mu kappa delta sigma*
Mixed agonist-antagonists
Nalbuphine --- +++
Pentazocine - +++ ++
Nalorphine - +++
Antagonists
Naloxone --- - - -
Naltrexone --- - - -
Endogenous opioid peptides
Enkephalins
Relatively selective δ ligands
Endorphins
Bind preferentially to μ receptors
Dynorphins
Highly selective agonist at κ receptors
Mechanism of action of opiates
Opioids produce analgesia by binding to specific
GPCRs located in brain & spinal cord regions
involved in the transmission & modulation of pain
Inhibit adenylyl cyclase → ↓ cAMP
Antipyretic
Analgesic
Anti-inflammatory agents
Mechanism of action
Inhibits cycloxygenase (COX) enzyme &
hence prostaglandin synthesis
COX-1 is a primarily constitutive in most
normal cells & tissues
COX-2 is induced isoform but is also
constitutively expressed in certain areas of
kidney & brain
NSAIDs do not inhibit the lipoxygenase
pathways & hence do not suppress leukotriene
formation
All NSAIDs except aspirin are competitive
inhibitors of COX
Aspirin irreversibly acetylates the enzyme
Mechanism of action
Clinical use of NSAIDs
Therapeutic uses
For treatment of acute gouty arthritis,
analgesic or antipyretic
Adverse effects
GIT: diarrhea
C/I in peptic ulcer disease (PUD )
Acute pancreatitis, hepatitis
CNS effect (frontal headache, dizziness,
vertigo, light-headedness, seizures, confusion,
severe depression, psychosis, hallucinations &
suicide
Hematopoietic (neutropenia, thrombocytopenia
& aplastic anemia)
4. The Fenamates
Europe
Its potency against COX-2 is greater than that of
several NSAIDs
Therapeutic Uses
Long-term symptomatic treatment of rheumatoid
190
Epilepsy
A. Generalized seizures
Generalized tonic-clonic (grand mal) seizures
Absence (petit mal) seizures
Atonic seizures
Clonic and myoclonic seizures
Infantile spasm (hypsarrhythmia)
B. Partial seizures
Simple partial seizures
Complex partial seizures
Partial seizures secondarily generalized
A. Generalized seizures(GS)
Involves the whole brain
Abnormal electrical activity throughout both hemispheres
Immediate loss of consciousness
1.Generalized tonic-clonic seizures(grand mal, major
epilepsy) - GTCS
Tonic phase (< 1 min)
Sudden loss of consciousness
Patient become rigid and falls to ground , respiration arrested
Clonic phase (2mins) -Jerking of the body musculature
Clonic phase followed by prolonged sleep and depression of
all CNS functions
defecation, micturition and salivation often occur
Immediately after the seizure the patient may
recover consciousness
drift in to sleep
have further convulsion (status epilepticus or serial
seizure)
Convulsion with out recovery of consciousness
(status epilepticus)- May lead to brain damage and
death
Further convulsion, after recovering consciousness
(serial seizure)
2. Absence (petit mal) seizures– minor epilepsy
Prevalent in child and cease at the age of 20
Momentary loss of consciousness, patient freezes and
stares in one direction
Onset and termination of attacks are abrupt
Patient abruptly ceases whatever he/she was doing
Impairment of external awareness is so brief that patient
is unaware of it
Many seizures each day may occur as compared to GTCS
3. Atonic seizures (astatic epilepsy)
Unconsciousness with relaxation of all muscles due to
excessive inhibitory discharges
4.Clonic and myoclonic seizures
Shock like momentary movement, contraction of muscles
of a limb or whole body
5.Infantile spasm ( hypsarrythmia)
Intermittent muscle spasm and progressive mental
deterioration
Epileptic syndrome rather than a specific seizure type
B. Partial seizure
The discharge begins locally and often remains localized
Symptoms depend on the brain region/regions involved
involuntary muscle contractions
abnormal sensory experiences
autonomic discharge
effects on mood and behaviour (psychomotor epilepsy)
1. Simple partial seizures (cortical focal epilepsy)
Lasts 0.5 – 1 min
Convolutions are confined to a group of muscles or
localized sensory disturbance depends on the area of
cortex involved
E.g. If motor cortex supplying to left thumb is affected then
jerking of left thumb occurs
With out loss of consciousness
2. Complex partial seizures (temporal lobe epilepsy,
psychomotor)
Confused behaviors, purposeless movements,
emotional changes
Seizure focus is located in temporal lobe
3. Simple or complex partial seizures secondarily
generalized
Partial seizures occurs followed by GTCS with loss
of consciousness
Possible causes of seizures
primary (idiopathic) – most of the cases
secondary to trauma/ surgery on head, intracranial
tumor, tuberculoma,cerebral ischemia, etc
Mechanism of action of antiepileptic drugs
GAT-1 - Tiag.
GABA-T GABA
Gabp
-
Extra cellular
SSA
Viga. &
Valp.
A
GAB
Na + Ca 2+
Barb BZD
Cell
membrane
- Cl- -
+
Intra cellular
Prolongation
Facilitation of GABA
Inhibition of
of Na+ Ca 2+
mediated
Channel
Cl- channel Channel
inactivation state
opening function
Individual drugs
Phenytoin (diphenylhydantoin)
Oldest nonsedative antiseizure drug
Used against partial seizures and generalized tonic-
clonic seizures
Mechanism of action
Prolonging inactive state of voltage sensitive Na+
channel------ use-dependent effect
Inhibitionof high frequency discharge with little effect
on low frequency discharges
At high/ toxic conc:reduce ca 2+ influx, inhibition of
glutamate,and facilitate GABA responses
Adverse effects
At therapeutic concentration
Neuroleptics
Major tranquillizers
Schizophrenia
Geek words: Skhizo( to split) & Phern (mind) w/c means
the split b/n the emotions & the intellect
It is one particular kind of psychosis
(men)
Use of antipsychotics
1.Schizophrenia
2.Anxiety
3. Anticholinergic
• Dry mouth, blurred vision
4. Endocrine
• Hyperprolactinemia
• Atypical antipsychotics do n’t raise
prolactin level
5. Extrapyramidal disturbances
a. Pseudo parkinsonism
Rigidity, tremor, hypokinesia, mask like face
•
dose is reduced
Anticholinergic anti PD drugs can be given
together with antipsychotics
b. Acute muscular dystonias
Muscle spasm mostly in linguo-facial muscles
•
jaw
• More common in children bellow 10 & girls
• Occurs with in a few hrs of single dose or at 1 st
week of therapy
• i.m injection of central anicholinergic
(promethazine or hydrxyzine) can clear the
reaction with in 10 – 15 minutes
c. Akathisia
• Restlessness, feeling discomfort, agitation as
complete desire to move about with out anxiety
• Occurs with in 1-8 weeks of therapy &
misleads as ‘exacerbation of psychosis’
• No specific antidote available
Central anticholinergic may reduce the
with clozapine)
4. Myocarditis
Drug interaction
1. Neuroleptics potentaite all CNS depresant
Hypnotics, anxiolytics, alcohol, opioids,
antihistamines & analgesics
2. Neuroleptics block the action of levodopa & DA
agonists in parkinsonism
3. Antihypertensive effect of clonidine &
methyldopa is reduced
4. They are poor enzyme inducers
Drug of choice ……..
Individual patients differ in their response to
different antipsychotics
There is no way to predict w/c patient will respond
better to w/c drug
However drug selection should consider state of the
patient & side effect profile of the drug
Eg. If the patient is aggressive, sedating drugs such as
CPZ would be drug of choice
Haloperidol is drug of choice if postural hypotension
is a problem
If there is difficulty in frequent administering of the
drug go for depot antipsychotic drugs
Antidepressant drugs
Depression
At any given moment about 3–5% of the population
is depressed & an estimated 10% of people may
become depressed during their lives
’’depression’’ is a misleading term
Every one in the normal course of daily life will
experience mood alteration
In this context depression does not represent a
disorder or illness
Lowered mood as normal response to the ups &
downs of living is more correctly termed as sadness
& happiness
Depression is defined as disorders of mood rather
than disturbances of thought or cognition
Major depression & dysthymia (minor) are pure
depressive syndromes whereas bipolar disorder &
cyclothymic disorder signify depression in
association with mania
The symptoms of depression
Emotional symptoms
Biological symptoms
Retardation of thought & action
Loss of libido
Mood ↓
Methydopa Inhibits NA synthesis
Fluoxetine Maprotiline
Fluvoxamine Trazodone
Paroxetine Nefazodone
Citalopram
Sertraline
SSRIs
1st line drugs
Due to their relatively safe & acceptability
Produce little or no sedation
Not produce anticholineric side effects
Devoid of α AR blocking action (no postural
hypotension)- suitable for elderly patients
No seizure precipitating propensity & not inhibit
cardiac conduction
No weight gain
For TCAs & SSRIs as onset of action is slow
Treatment should be for at least 4-6 weeks
before concluding that the drug is ineffective
If there is a partial response, treatment should
be continued for several more weeks before
increasing the dose
Treatment should continue for at least 4 months
following remission
III. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
(MAOIs)
MAO-A is primarily responsible for NE, 5-HT &
tyramine metabolism
MAO-B is more selective for DA
Non-selective MAOIs or selective MAO-A inhibitors
have antidepressant effect
Older non selective MAOIs :Tranylcypromine,
phenelzine & isocarboazid
Irreversible, long-acting & non-selective
Moclobemide (MAO-A inhibitor)
Reversible, short acting & selective
IV. Miscellaneous ('atypical') antidepressants
Trazodone
Selective but less efficiently block 5-HT uptake
Prominent α blocking & 5-HT2 antagonistic effect
Mianserin
Not inhibit either NA or 5-HT uptake
Block presynaptic α2
Tianeptine
↑5-HT uptake , it is not sedative & stimulant
Effective for anxiodpressive state
Amineptine
Like tianeptine but has antidepressant action
Venlafaxine & duloxetine
‘serotonin & NA reuptake inhibitor ’ = SNRI
In contrast to older TCAs,
They do not interact with cholinergic, adrenergic,
or histaminergic receptors
No sedative effect
Mirtazapine
Block α2 autoreceptor ( on NA neuron) & hetro
receptors( on 5-HT neurons )
Bupropion
Inhibit DA & NA uptake
Has excitant rather than sedative effect
Clinical indications of antidepressants
Major depression
Anxiety disorders
panic, generalized anxiety, social phobia &
obsessive-compulsive disorders
Enuresis
Chronic pain
Migraine
Amitryptiline has prophylactic use
Pruritus
Some TCAs have antipruritic action
Eg. Topical doxepine
Other indications
Bulimia (fluoxetine)
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (fluoxetine)
Aattention deficit hyperkinetic disorder
(imipramine, desipramine)
Adverse effects
TCAs
Sedation, tremor & insomnia
Blurred vision, constipation, urinary
hesitancy, confusion
Orthostatic hypotension, conduction defects,
arrhythmias
Aggravation of psychosis
Seizures
Weight gain, sexual disturbances
MAOIs
Headache
Drowsiness
Dry mouth
Weight gain
Postural hypotension
Sexual disturbances
SSRIs
Anxiety
Insomnia
Gastrointestinal symptoms
Decreased libido, sexual dysfunction
Teratogenic potential with paroxetine
Drug interactions
TCAs
1. Potentiate directly acting sympathomimetics
2. Abolish antihypertensive effect of clonidine
3.Potenciate CNS depressants
4. Phenytoin, phenylbutazole, ASA & CPZ can displace
TCAs from PPB
5. PhB induce as well as competitively inhibit impramine
metabolism
6.SSRIs inhibit metabolism of several drugs
including TCAs
7. TCAs delay absorption of their own & other drugs
MAO- A inhibitors
Tyramine containing food
‘Cheese’ like reaction
Drug treatment of mania & manic
depressive disorder
Drugs used
Neuroleptics
TCAs
Lithium
Carbamazepine
Valproate
BZDs
A. Neuroleptics
Commonly used drugs: haloperidol or
chlorpromazine or zuclopenthixol (acuphase)
Haloperidol is drug of choice
As it is less sedating & free from many of
cardiovascular problems of CPZ
Control sever behavior disturbance with
additional sedatives such as lorazepam
injection
Atypical antipsychotics (olazapine, resperidone)
& other newer antipsychotics with or with out a
BZD are now 1st line drugs for control of acute
mania
B. Lithium carbonate
Lithium used as carbonate salt b/c it is less
hygroscopic & less gastric irritant than LiCl &
other salts
Lithium carbonate is referred to as an "antimanic"
drug
However, it is considered a "mood-stabilizing“
agent
B/c of its primary action of preventing mood
swings in patients with manic-depressive disorder
Mechanism of action
Antimanic/mood stabilizing action remains unclear
It has been suggested that
1. Li+ partly replace body Na+ & nearly equally
distributed inside & out side cells & hence it interferes
ionic fluxes
2. It
↓ NA & DA release in treated animals with out
affecting 5-HT release
3. Effects
on secondary messengers : one of the best-
defined effects of Li+ (action on inositol phosphates)
Effects on secondary messengers
IP3 & DAG : important second messengers for
adrenergic & muscarinic transmission
Blocking the pathway leads to depletion of PIP2
(precursor of IP3 & DAG)
Hyperactive neurons involved in manic state may
be preferentially affected
i.e. Li+ could cause a selective depression of the
overactive neurons
Li+ has no acute effect on normal individuals
Mechanism of action
PIP2 : phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate
PLC: phospholipase-C
G: coupling protein
EFFECTS: activation of protein kinase C, mobilization of intracellular Ca 2+, etc.
Pharmacokinetics
MOA
Levodopa inters the brain via an active transport
system that carries it across the BBB.
Converted by decarboxylase to DA which helps
restore a proper balance between DA and Ach.
A. Levodopa (L-Dopa)
Pharmacokinetics
Administered orally and absorbed rapidly, foods, delay
absorption (by slowing gastric emptying).
Metabolized in the periphery, primarily by
decarboxylase enzymes to DA, and to a lesser extent,
by COMT
Less than 2% of each dose enters the brain
A. Levodopa (L-Dopa)
Adverse effect
Are dose dependent
Nausea and vomiting – by stimulating the CTZ
dyskinesias – head bobbing, tics grimacing
Cardiovascular effects
Postural hypotension early in the treatment
Arrhythmias in patients with cardiac disease
Psychosis; clozapine can reduce psychotic symptoms with out
intensifying symptoms of PD.
Other adverse effects.
May darken sweat and urine; patients should be forewarned of this
harmless effect.
Levodopa plus carbidopa
More effective than levodopa alone
Carbidopa enhances effects of levodopa by inhibiting
decraboxylases in periphery so levodopa available for
CNS increases
Advantages of carbidopa - Combination
superior in 3 ways
Increases fraction of levodopa available for CNS
Levodopa dose can be reduced by 75%
Decreases cardiovascular response.
B. Dopamine Agonists
Unlike levodopa
They donot requier enzymatic conversion to an acitve
metabolite
Have no potentially toxic metabolites
Do not compete with other substances for active
transport in to blood and BBB.
Some how selective to dopamine agonists
May have limited Adverse Effect than L-dopa
B. Dopamine Agonists
Four dopamine agonists are available
ergot derivatives
Bromocriptine
Pergolide
nonergot derivatives
Pramipexole,
Ropirinole
Cause fewer side effects than the ergot derivatives
B. Dopamine Agonists
BROMOCRIPTINE
D2 agonist, now rarely used as an antiparkinsonian
Absorbed to a variable extent from GIT, Peak= 1-2 h
Excreted in the bile and feces
Usual daily dose 7.5 – 30 mg ( built up slowly 2-3 M)
PERGOLIDE
Ergot derivative
Stimulates both D1 & D2
More effective than Bromocriptine
No longer avialable (Associated with valvular heart disease)
B. Dopamine Agonists
PRAMIPEXOLE
Not an erogt derivative, prefers D3 receptor
Effective as a monotherapy for mild parkinsonism
Permits the dose of L-dopa to be reduced and soothing
out response flactuations.
Started at low dose and slowly increased
ROPINIROLE
Nonergoline derivative
Relatively pure D2 receptor agonist, effective as
monotherapy
C. COMT inhibitors
Two COMT inhibitors are available Entacapone
and Tolcapone.
Benefits of both derive from inhibiting metabolism
of levodopa in the periphery
these drugs have no direct therapeutic effects of
their own.
D. Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
SELEGILINE, RASAGILINE
Actions and uses
I. Analeptics
Respiratory stimulants
Convulsants
Respiratory stimulant
Doxapram
Convulsants
Pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)
Picrotoxin
Bicuculline
Strychnine
Respiratory stimulant
Doxapram
Has a bigger margin of safety b/n respiratory stimulation
& convulsions
At low dose more selective for respiratory center than
other analeptics
Occasionally used as an i.v. infusion in patients with
acute respiratory failure
May be used to abolish episodes of apnoea for premature
infants who don't respond for thoephyline
Counteract post-operative respiratory depression
Associated with nausea, coughing & restlessness w/c
limit its usefulness
Convulsants
Pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)
Precise mechanism is not known
Antiepilepticdrugs w/c inhibit PTZ-induced
convulsions imply their effectiveness against absence
seizures
Used to test potential anticonvulsant dugs in
laboratory animals ……has no clinical use
Used for screening of latent epileptics as it can
precipitate the typical EEG pattern of absence
seizures in susceptible patients …..????
Convulsants
Picrotoxin
Blocks the action of GABAA on Cl- channels but
not competitively
Obtained from the fishberry
The plant's name reflects the native practice of
incapacitating fish
Like bicuculline, it causes convulsions & has no
clinical uses
Diazepam facilitate GABAergic transmission
Antidote for picrotoxin poisoning
Convulsants
Bicuculline
Resembles strychnine in its effects with different
mechanism of action i.e. Strychnine block glycine
receptor while bicuculline block GABA receptor
It is competitive GABAA antagonist (block the
receptor) but not affect GABAB receptor
The main effects are on the brain rather than the
spinal cord
Useful experimental tool for studying GABA-
mediated transmission….. has no clinical uses
Convulsants
Strychnine
Potent convulsant
Tonics containing strychnine …. ‘’banned’’
Acts particularly throughout spinal cord, causing
violent extensor spasms that are triggered by minor
sensory stimuli, the head being thrown back & the
face fixed
Mechanism of action : blocking glycine receptors
Treatment of strychnine poisoning is similar to status
epilepticus
Convulsion
Convulsants
A release
A Inhibit
reuptake
A inhibits
MAO
Pharmacological Actions
Wakefulness/alertness, mood elevation, ↓fatigue, ↑ed
ability to concentrate, ↑ motor & speech activity
locomotor stimulation, stereotyped behaviour,
euphoria & excitement
Stimulate the respiratory center especially when it
has been depressed by drugs
Anorexia / lose of appetite by inhibiting
hypothalamic feeding center
with continued use this effect wears off in a few
days & food intake may return to normal
Amphetamine & related compounds
Therapeutic uses
For attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD):
Hyperkinesias
Drug used : methylphenidate
at doses lower than those causing euphoria &
Adverse Effects
Euphoria, tremor, irritability, insomnia, convulsion
(at higher doses), hyperthermia & coma
Cardiac stimulation leads to headache, palpitations,
cardiac arrhythmias, anginal pain
Hypertension
weight loss, Psychotic reaction
Psychic dependence, tolerance & physical
dependence
Amphetamine & related compounds
MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphethamine)
caused sudden deaths even after a single/moderate
dose
Condition resembling heatstroke, associated with
muscle damage & renal failure
Inappropriate secretion of ADH, leading to thirst,
over-hydration & hyponatraemia ('water
intoxication')
Cerebral haemorrhage after amphetamine use,
possibly the result of acutely raised blood pressure
Amphetamine & related compounds
Drug interactions
Tricyclic antidepressant
Antihypertensive agents
Foods with high tyramine content
Amphetamine & related compounds
Misuse of amphetamines
By soldiers, military pilots & others to increase
performance & to remain alert under extremely
fatiguing conditions
By students vaguely as a means of helping to
concentrate before & during exam
As the improvement caused by reduction of
fatigue can be offset by the mistakes of
overconfidence
By athletes to ↑ performance w/c end up with
deterioration
Drugs used by athletes as CNS stimulant & officially
prohibited
Ephedrine & methylephedrine
Amphetamines & its derivatives
Cocaine
caffeine
Other CNS stimulants
Migraine headaches
OTC preparations
Theophylline: Prophylaxis for chronic asthma
symptoms
Respiratory Stimulant
Adverse effects