Transcript Document
ANTIPARKINSONIAN
AGENTS
MA. LENY ALDA G. JUSAYAN, MD
DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACOLOGY
PARKINSONISM
• Tremors are present even at rest
• Rigidity & impairment of voluntary
movements
• Postural tremor, intention tremors
The UK Parkinson's Disease
Society Brain Bank Criteria For
Clinical Diagnosis:
• Bradykinesia plus one of rigidity,
tremor, or postural instability
• At least three of rest tremor,
progressive symptoms, unilateral
onset, early response to levodopa,
revodopa-induced dyskinesia
• No identifiable cause for the
parkinsonism.
Motor Symptoms:
Tremor:
70% of patients suffer resting tremor
pill rolling quality
can affect all of the limbs as well as the
face, neck, head and jaw.
Rigidity:
increased tone or stiffness in the
muscles
mask-like face and clog-like release of
muscles.
Bradykinesia
difficulty initiating and continuing
movement.
Postural Instability
Forward flexion of neck, hips, knees
and elbows leads to poor balance.
Gait disorders
Shuffling, small steps described as
festination, reduced arm swing and
sudden freezing spells lead to problems
walking
Swallowing (dysphagia) and Speech
disorders (dysarthria)
Handwriting: Micrographia
Nonmotor Symptoms:
• Depression:
– 20-90% major depressive episode, reactive
or endogenous
• Dementia:
– 20% of patients will become demented
(have impairments of 3 of the following in
the presence of clear consciousness:
language, memory, visuospatial skills,
emotionality, personality and cognition
Sleep disturbances:
Problems with sleep
fragmentation, sleep initiation, early
morning awakening, excessive
daytime somnolence and
parasomnias.
Sexual dysfunction
Ability to drive a car
Ability to gain employment
Constipation
CHOREA
• Irregular, unpredictable involuntary
jerks
• Impaired voluntary activity
• ballismus
ATHETOSIS
• Slow & writhing movements
• Abnormal postures (dystonia)
TICS
• Sudden coordinated abnormal
movements
• Repetitive sniffing
• shoulder shrugging
• face & head movement
PATHOGENESIS:
• Idiopathic
• Exposure to unrecognized
neurotoxins
• Oxidation reaction with generation of
free radicals
• Reduced level of dopamine in the
basal ganglia
•
Pyramidal System:
– begins in the primary motor cortex
– descends through the corticospinal
and corticobulbar tracts
– affects the lower motor neurones
in the brain stem and spinal cord.
•Extrapyramidal System:
•basal ganglia and their cortical
connection
•basal ganglia are made up of the:
Caudate Nucleus
Putamen (Striatum)
Globus Pallidus interna (Gpi)
Globus Pallidus externa (Gpe)
Subthalamic Nucleus
Substantia Nigra
main outputs of this system are
the Substantia Nigra and the Gpi,
both of which feed to the
ventrolateral thalamus.
The main Pathological feature of
Parkinson’s disease is the loss of the
dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway
80% of the Dopamine producing cells
must be lost before symptoms begin to
show
GOALS OF TREATMENT:
• Pharmacologic
attempt to restore
dopaminergic
activity with
levodopa and
dopamine agonists
• Restore normal
balance of
cholinergic &
dopaminergic
influences on the
basal ganglia
PATHOPHYSIOLOGIC BASIS
OF TREATMENT:
• Dopaminergic
neurons in the
substantia nigra
that normally
inhibit the output
of GABAergic
cells in the
corpus striatum
are lost
LEVODOPA
• (-) -3-(3-4 dihydroxyphenyl) L- alanine
• Immediate metabolic precursor of
dopamine
• Levorotatory stereoisomer of
dopamine
PHARMACOKINETICS:
• Rapidly absorbed from the SI
• Food delays absorption
• Amino acids in food competes
with drug
• Peak plasma concentration: 1-2
hrs
• Plasma t ½ : 1-3 hrs
• HVA, DOPAC
(dihydroxyphenylacetic acid) are
main metabolites
CLINICAL USE:
• Responsiveness may be lost secondary
to disappearance of dopaminergic
nigostriatal nerve terminals
• Early use lowers mortality rate
• Combined with Carbidopa & Benseraside
• Sinemet – dopa preparation containing
levodopa in fixed proportion (1:10 or 1:4)
• Sinemet 25/100 TID
• 30 -60 minutes before meals
ADVERSE EFFECTS:
•
•
•
•
•
•
GIT effects
Cardiovascular
Dyskinesias
Behavioral effects
Fluctuations in response
Misc: mydriasis, blood dyscrasias,
hot flushes, gout, brownish
discoloration of the urine,
abnormal smell
DRUG INTERACTIONS:
• Vitamin B6 enhance extracerebral
metabolism of levodopa
• MAO – A inhibitors
CONTRAINDICATIONS:
•
•
•
•
•
Psychoses
Angle closure glaucoma
Cardiac dysrhythmia
PUD
Melanoma or suspicious
undiagnosed skin lesions
DOPAMINE AGONISTS
• Do not require enzymatic
conversion for an active
metabolite
• No potential toxic metabolites
• Do not compete with other
substances for an active transport
• First line in parkinsonism
• End of dose akinesia to levodopa
• On & off phenomenon refractory
to levodopa
ERGOT ALKALOIDS:
• BROMOCRIPTINE
– D2 agonists
– Endocrinologic disorders
(hyperprolactinemia)
– Absorbed variably in GIT
– Peak plasma levels: 1-2 hrs
ERGOT ALKALOID:
• PERGOLIDE
– Stimulates both D1 and D2
– More effective than
bromocriptine
CLINICAL USE:
BROMOCRIPTINE:
– 7.5 mg & 30 mg
– 1. 25 mg BID after meals X 2-3
months and increase 2.5 mg q 2 wks
PERGOLIDE:
- 3 mg daily
- 0.05 mg starter dose
ADVERSE EFFECTS:
•
•
•
•
•
GIT
Cardiovascular
Dyskinesias
Mental disturbances
Misc: erythromelalgia
NON-ERGOT DOPAMINE
AGONISTS:
PRAMIPEZOLE
Preferential affinity to D3
Monotherapy is effective
Neuroprotective (H scavenger)
Enhance neurotrophic activity
Rapidly absorbed
Peak plasma concentration: 2 hrs
0.125 mg TID then doubled after 1 wk
Increments of 0.75 mg at weekly
intervals
NON-ERGOT ALKALOIDS:
• ROPINIROLE
– Pure D2 receptor agonists
– 0.25 mg TID then total daily dose is
increased by 0.75 mg at weekly
intervals until the 4th wk & increased
by 1.5 mg thereafter
SIDE EFFECTS:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Postural hypotension
Fatigue
Somnolence
Peripheral edema
Nausea
Constipation
Dyskinesias
Confusion
MONOAMINE OXIDASE
INHIBITORS
MAO – A: metabolizes NE &
serotonin
MAO – B: metabolizes dopamine
SELEGILINE (Deprenyl)
• Selective inhibitor of MAO-B
• Retards breakdown of dopamine
• Adjunct in fluctuating response to
levodopa
• 5 mg with breakfast & lunch
• Cause insomnia when taken
during the day
• Not to be taken with meperidine,
TCAs, SSRIs
• Increase adverse effects of
levodopa
RASAGILINE
• MAO-B inhibitor
• Potent than selegiline
• CI with levodopa – HPN crisis
CATHECOL-O-METHYLTRANSFERASE
INHIBITORS:
• TOLCAPONE- central & peripheral
metabolism
• ENTACAPONE
– peripheral metabolism
– Prolong the duration of levodopa by
decreasing its peripheral metabolism
– Helpful in patients receiving levodopa
who have fluctuations
– t ½ = 2 hrs
AMANTADINE
• Antiviral agent
• Potentiates dopaminergic function by
influencing the synthesis, release,
reuptake of dopamine
PHARMACOKINETICS:
peak plasma concentration: 1-4 hrs
after oral dose
Plasma t ½ = 2-4 hrs
CLINICAL USE:
• Less potent than levodopa and benefits
are short-lived
• 100 mg BID-TID
ADVERSE REACTIONS:
Restlessness, depression, irritability,
insomnia, agitation, excitement,
hallucinations & confusion
Livedo reticularis
CONTRAINDICATIONS:
• History of seizures
• Heart failure
ACETYLCHOLINE
BLOCKING AGENTS:
• Improve tremor & rigidity of
parkinsonism but have little effect
in bradykinesia
• Benztropine mesylate
• Biperiden
• Orphenadine
• Procyclidine
• Trihexyphenidyl
ADVERSE EFFECTS:
• CNS
• Mydriasis, urinary retention,
constipation, tachycardia,
tachypnea, increase IOP,
palpitations, cardiac arrythmias
• Acute suppurative parotitis
CONTRAINDICATIONS:
• Prostatic hyperplasia
• Obstructive GI diseases
• Angle closure glaucoma
The net result of all of these medications is
the balancing out of the
acetylcholine/dopamine balance and an
improvement in movement
SURGICAL PROCEDURES:
Thalamotomy –
conspicous
tremor
Posteroventral
pallidotomy