Download moini_ch17_lecture

Document related concepts

Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Focus on
PHARMACOLOGY
ESSENTIALS FOR HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
CHAPTER
17
Drugs Used to
Treat Central
Nervous System
Conditions
Figure 17-1 The central nervous system (CNS) includes the brain and spinal cord. The
peripheral nervous system includes the nerves throughout the body that exit from the
spinal cord.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Figure 17-2
The spinal cord.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
CNS Stimulants: Uses
• Diverse group of pharmacologic agents
• Exact mechanism of action is not clear
but may stimulate cerebral cortex and
increase activity of norepinephrine,
dopamine, and other catecholamines at
CNS synapses.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
CNS Stimulants: Uses
• Indirect-acting sympathomimetics are
used to treat attention deficit–
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); very
few other therapeutic uses.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
CNS Stimulants: Adverse Effects
• Common: headache, palpitations,
cardiac dysrhythmias, hypertension,
nervousness, nausea
• Highly addictive and widely abused
outside therapeutic therapy (especially
methamphetamine)
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
CNS Stimulants:
Contraindications
• Do not use in patients with a history of
drug abuse, severe agitation,
hyperthyroidism, diabetes mellitus,
moderate to severe hypertension,
advanced arteriosclerosis, angina
pectoris, cardiovascular disorders, or
glaucoma.
• Safety in pregnancy and lactation not
established.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
CNS Stimulants:
Patient Information
• Advise patients that taking CNS
stimulants for a long time can cause
withdrawal symptoms.
• Advise families of children with ADHD
to seek counseling. Drug therapy alone
is insufficient.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Sedatives and Hypnotics
• Sedatives: diminish activity of CNS;
used to relieve anxiety
• Hypnotics: induce sleep; used for
short-term treatment of insomnia
• Difference between two drug classes is
in the dosage
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Hypnotics and Sleep
• No currently available hypnotics induce
what can be termed “natural” sleep.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-1
Commonly Used Benzodiazepines
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-1 (continued) Commonly Used Benzodiazepines
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Benzodiazepines: Uses
• Mechanism of action appears related to
their ability to increase the action of
neurotransmitter GABA.
• Indicated for generalized anxiety
disorders, panic disorders, insomnia,
some types of seizures, muscle
relaxation
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Benzodiazepines:
Adverse Effects
• Common: drowsiness, ataxia, impaired
judgment, rebound insomnia, tolerance
• Serious (with overdosage): CNS and
respiratory depression, hypotension,
coma
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Benzodiazepines:
Contraindications
• Do not use in pregnancy, severe liver
or kidney disorders, or in hyperactive
children.
• Interact with alcohol, omeprazole to
cause increased CNS depression
• Interact with cimetidine, disulfiram,
hormonal contraceptives, theophylline,
ranitidine
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Benzodiazepines:
Patient Information
• Educate patients about relaxation
techniques and to avoid caffeine,
especially close to bedtime.
• Advise patients not to abruptly stop
medication.
• Warn patients to avoid alcohol and
other CNS depressants.
• Advise patients to avoid driving.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Oral Contraceptives
• Warn women taking benzodiazepines
and oral contraceptives that increased
sedative effects may occur because
high levels of benzodiazepines may
accumulate in the blood plasma.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Barbiturates: Uses
• Classified as CNS agents,
anticonvulsants, and sedative-hypnotics
• May work by inhibiting reticularactivating system, thereby interfering
with impulse transmission of cerebral
cortex
• Used to treat insomnia and for some
types of seizures
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Barbiturates: Adverse Effects
• Common: sedation, nausea, vomiting,
constipation, diarrhea, bradycardia
• Serious: respiratory depression,
circulatory shock, renal or hepatic
damage
• Addiction
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Barbiturates: Contraindications
• Do not use in patients with familial
history of porphyria or with severe
respiratory or kidney disease; and in
pregnancy or lactation.
• Interact with alcohol, oral
anticoagulants, corticosteroids, oral
contraceptives
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Barbiturates:
Patient Information
• Instruct patients in relaxation
techniques.
• Advise patients not to stop the
medication suddenly.
• Warn patients not to drink alcohol or
drive while taking barbiturates.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Epilepsy
• Permanent, recurrent seizure disorder
• Seizure: periodic attack of disturbed
cerebral function
– Generalized tonic-clonic (previously grand
mal)
– Generalized absence (previous petit mal)
– Generalized myoclonic
– Partial
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-2
Most Commonly Prescribed Antiseizure Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-2 (continued) Most Commonly Prescribed Antiseizure Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-2 (continued) Most Commonly Prescribed Antiseizure Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Phenytoin (Dilantin): Uses
• Most common hydantoin
• Reduces voltage, frequency, spread of
electrical discharges within motor
cortex
• Used for partial, tonic-clonic,
psychomotor, and nonepileptic seizures
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Phenytoin: Adverse Effects
• Common: blurred vision, dizziness,
drowsiness, fatigue, thrombocytopenia,
aplastic anemias
• Excess dosages: confusion, delirium,
psychosis
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Phenytoin: Contraindications
• Avoid in patients with hypoglycemic
seizures, sinus bradycardia, or heart
block, and in pregnancy or lactation.
• Use cautiously in patients with impaired
liver or kidney function, alcoholism,
blood disorders, or hypotension.
• Lower the dosage in elderly patients.
• Numerous drug–drug interactions
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Phenytoin: Patient Information
• Advise patients that urine may turn
pink or red-brown.
• Instruct patients with diabetes to
frequently check blood glucose levels.
• Advise patients to use good oral
hygiene to prevent gingival
hyperplasia.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Valproic Acid (Depakote): Uses
• Action may be related to increased
bioavailability of GABA to neurons.
• Used to treat simple and complex
absence seizures
• Has been used for other generalized
seizures
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Valproic Acid: Adverse Effects
• Common: nausea, vomiting,
hypersalivation, abdominal cramps,
sedation, drowsiness, possible
prolonged bleeding time
• Serious: liver failure, life-threatening
pancreatitis
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Valproic Acid: Contraindications
• Safe use during pregnancy not
established.
• Increases effects of CNS depressants
• Interacts with aspirin, warfarin,
cimetidine, and other drugs
• May alter thyroid function and urine
ketone tests
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Valproic Acid:
Patient Information
• Advise patients to swallow capsules
whole or add liquid form to foods or
liquids to improve taste.
• Instruct patients to take with meals to
reduce GI upset.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Ethosuximide: Uses
• Blocks calcium channels to stabilize
neuronal excitability, raising threshold
of uncontrolled cerebral discharges
• Used to control absence and myoclonic
seizures and akinetic epilepsy
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Ethosuximide: Adverse Effects
• Common: drowsiness, hiccups, ataxia,
dizziness, headache, euphoria,
restlessness, anxiety, blurred vision,
aggressiveness, agranulocytosis,
gingival hyperplasia, nausea, vomiting,
anorexia
• Serious: aplastic anemia
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Ethosuximide: Contraindications
• Avoid use in severe liver or kidney
disease.
• Safety not established in pregnancy,
lactation, or children younger than 3
years.
• Interacts with primidone,
carbamazepine, and isoniazid
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Ethosuximide:
Patient Information
• Advise patients about possibility of
blood disorders.
• Instruct patients to report sore throat,
fever, or bruising.
• Warn patients against driving.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Carbamazepine (Tegretol): Uses
• Promotes sodium efflux, which reduces
neuronal excitability, but leaves motor
cortex relatively unaffected
• Used for partial and tonic-clonic
seizures and trigeminal neuralgia
• Also used to treat depression and
bipolar disorder
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Carbamazepine:
Adverse Effects
• Common: blood disorders, altered
urination, liver or kidney dysfunctions,
confusion and agitation in elderly
patients especially, blurred vision,
dizziness, drowsiness, fatigue
• Serious: severe cardiovascular
disturbances
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Carbamazepine:
Contraindications
• Avoid in patients with cardiac or liver
impairment.
• Use extremely cautiously in pregnancy.
• Interacts with antineoplastic agents,
antiretroviral protease inhibitors,
barbiturates, calcium channel blockers,
corticosteroids, and many more drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Carbamazepine:
Patient Information
• Inform patients that blood disorders
may occur.
• Advise patients to report sore throat,
mucosal ulceration, petechiae, or
bruising of unknown cause.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Parkinson’s Disease
• Occurs mostly in elderly individuals
• Nervous system disorder characterized
by movement abnormalities such as
tremor of head and extremities,
difficulty coordinating fine muscle
movement, hypokinesia (inability or
slowness in initiating movements)
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Cause of Parkinson’s Disease
• Unknown, but a CNS defect leads to it
• Substantia nigra is important to
initiation and control of muscular
movement
• Lack of dopaminergic activity in
substantia nigra leads to imbalance
between dopamine and acetylcholine
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Figure 17-3
Normal (A) and abnormal (B) balance between dopamine and
acetylcholine.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Parkinsonism
• Refers to symptoms produced by
certain drugs, poisons, and traumatic
lesions in the basal ganglia
• Also called secondary parkinsonism
• Symptoms may be temporary.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Treatment of
Parkinson’s Disease
• No cure available
• Drug therapy manages symptoms.
• Pharmacotherapy attempts to
rebalance dopamine and acetylcholine
by:
– Decreasing muscarinic activity
– Increasing dopaminergic activity by
blockings its breakdown or mimicking its
action
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Kava
• Patients who have Parkinson’s disease
should not take the natural product
kava, which is often taken as a dietary
supplement to reduce stress and
anxiety.
• Antipsychotics, barbiturates,
benzodiazepines, and CNS depressants
should not be taken with kava.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-3
Anticholinergic Drugs Used for Parkinson’s Disease
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Anticholinergic Drugs: Uses
• Work by inhibiting muscarine receptors
and blocking effect of acetylcholine
• Only centrally acting anticholinergics
are used (benztropine and
trihexyphenidyl)
• Can be used to treat parkinsonism
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Anticholinergics:
Adverse Effects
• Common: anxiety, agitation, confusion,
dry mouth, decreased sweating and
heat release
• Serious: urticaria, urine retention,
paresthesias, sinus tachycardia
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Anticholinergics:
Contraindications
• Safe use in pregnancy not established.
• Should not be given with other
antimuscarinics
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Anticholinergics:
Patient Information
• Instruct patients to avoid alcohol.
• Advise patients to consume a high-fiber
diet to help ease constipation.
• Warn patients to avoid driving because
the drug causes drowsiness.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-4
Dopaminergic Drugs Used for Parkinson’s Disease
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-4 (continued) Dopaminergic Drugs Used for Parkinson’s Disease
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Dopaminergics: Uses
• Precise mechanism unknown; but
dopaminergics are precursors of
dopamine
• Most commonly used is levodopa
(Larodopa)
• Used to treat Parkinson’s disease and
parkinsonism associated with
manganese and carbon monoxide
poisoning
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Dopaminergics:
Adverse Effects
• Common: dyskinesia, hallucinations,
mental confusion
• Long-term: loss of efficacy
• Abrupt discontinuation: neuroleptic
malignant syndrome (tachycardia,
muscular rigidity, fever, mental status
changes, diaphoresis, tachypnea)
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Dopaminergics:
Contraindications
• Use cautiously in cardiac disease.
• Should not be used in patients with a
history of allergy to these substances.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Dopaminergics:
Patient Information
• Instruct patients to take with food to
avoid GI upset and avoid foods rich in
vitamin B6 (beans and cereals).
• Advise patients to use good oral
hygiene.
• Warn patients not to discontinue the
drug abruptly.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Schizophrenia
• Chronic psychiatric disease
• Positive symptoms: exaggerations of
normal functioning, such as
hallucinations and delusions
• Negative symptoms: terse speech,
social withdrawal, apathy, anhedonia
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antipsychotic Drugs
• Typical
– Examples: chlorpromazine (Thorazine),
haloperidol (Haldol)
• Atypical
– Examples: clozapine (Clozaril), olanzapine
(Zyprexa), risperidone (Risperdal)
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-5
Common Typical and Atypical Antipsychotic Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-5 (continued) Common Typical and Atypical Antipsychotic Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-5 (continued) Common Typical and Atypical Antipsychotic Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-5 (continued) Common Typical and Atypical Antipsychotic Drugs
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antipsychotics: Uses
• Act by blocking postsynaptic
dopaminergic receptors
• Used to decrease the positive
symptoms of schizophrenia
• Some agents are effective antiemetic
and antinausea agents
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antipsychotics:
Adverse Effects
• Common: sedation, dry mouth, sexual
dysfunction, akathisia, bradykinesia,
tardive dyskinesia
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antipsychotics:
Contraindications
• Contraindicated in comatose patients
who have received large amounts of
CNS depressant drugs
• Contraindicated in patients with known
drug allergies to these agents
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antipsychotics:
Patient Information
• Advise family members about adverse
effects.
• Suggest using hard candy or ice chips
for a dry mouth.
• Warn patient not to drive a car until
effects are known.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Lithium: Uses
• Mechanism of action is unclear.
• Used in control and prophylaxis of
acute mania and in acute manic phase
of mixed bipolar disorder
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Lithium: Adverse Effects
• Common: nausea, tremors
• Overdosage: vomiting, diarrhea,
dizziness, headache, drowsiness,
tinnitus, disorientation, short-term
memory loss
• Toxic levels: kidney and heart damage
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Lithium: Contraindications
• Avoid in pregnancy and in patients with
thyroid disorders.
• Interacts with carbamazepine,
haloperidol, and phenothiazines
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Lithium: Patient Information
• Advise patients to drink plenty of fluids.
• Instruct patients to contact their
physician if diarrhea or fever develops.
• Warn patients not to drink excessive
caffeinated beverages and to avoid hot
weather.
• Warn patients not to drive until effects
are known.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Depression
• Major depression affects about 5 to 6%
of Americans.
• Symptoms include feelings of doom,
lack of self-worth, inability to sense
pleasure, loss of energy, inability to
concentrate, changes in sleep habits,
thoughts of suicide.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Antidepressants
• Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
• Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
• Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
(SSRIs)
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-6
Classifications of Antidepressants
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Table 17-6 (continued) Classifications of Antidepressants
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Mechanism of Action
of Diazepam Animation
Click on the screenshot to view an animation showing the mechanism of
action of diazepam.
Back to Directory
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
TCAs: Uses
• Increase effects of norepinephrine and
serotonin in the CNS by blocking
reuptake by neurons
• Used to treat endogenous depression
and reactive depression
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
TCAs: Adverse Effects
• Common: dry mouth, blurred vision,
constipation, urine retention,
tachycardia, mental confusion,
sedation, postural hypotension
• Serious: may precipitate hyperpyrexic
crisis, tachycardia, or seizures
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
TCAs: Contraindications
• Avoid in patients during acute recovery
from myocardial infarction or with
severe renal and hepatic impairment.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
TCAs: Patient Information
• Warn patients not to stop medication
abruptly.
• Advise patients to take at bedtime to
promote a normal sleep pattern.
• Instruct patients to report severe
postural hypotension.
• Educate patients that the drugs must
be taken continually to be effective.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
TCAs and Other Medications
• Instruct patients to consult their
physicians about taking any other
medications, including OTC drugs, with
TCAs.
• Instruct patients to contact their
physicians if allergic reactions occur
while taking these medications.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Effect of TCAs on Prostate Gland
• Elderly men with enlarged prostate
glands are at a higher risk for urine
retention when taking TCAs.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
St. John’s Wort
• The natural product interacts with
TCAs, MAOIs, SSRIs, alcohol, and foods
high in tyramine or catecholamines.
• Women should not use St. John’s wort
during pregnancy or lactation.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
SSRIs: Uses
• Act by primarily blocking serotonin
reuptake
• Used to treat depression, geriatric
depression, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, bulimia nervosa, premenstrual
dysphoric disorder
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
SSRIs: Adverse Effects
• Common: headache, nausea, vomiting,
tremor, insomnia, dizziness, diarrhea
• Serious: cardiac toxicity and death
from overdose
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
SSRIs: Contraindications
• Do not use concurrently with MAOIs or
thioridazine.
• Do not use in pregnancy or in children
younger than 7 years.
• Use cautiously in patients with hepatic
or renal impairment, renal failure,
lactation, cardiac disease, and diabetes
mellitus.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
SSRIs: Patient Information
• Advise patients to drive carefully while
taking antidepressants, especially at
the beginning of therapy.
• Instruct patients to take in the morning
with food to minimize insomnia and GI
upset.
• Warn patients to avoid alcohol.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
(MAOIs): Uses
• May act by preventing natural
breakdown of neurotransmitters
• Used as second- or third-line
antidepressants, depressive phase of
bipolar disorder, and severe exogenous
depression
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
MAOIs: Adverse Effects
• Common: orthostatic hypotension,
nausea, constipation, dry mouth,
diarrhea, dizziness, vertigo, headache
• Serious: hypertensive crisis
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
MAOIs: Contraindications
• Avoid in patients with epilepsy, liver
disease, and serious cardiovascular
disease.
• These drugs interact with many other
drugs and with foods containing
tyramine (cheese, yogurt, beef, coffee,
tea, caffeinated sodas, chocolate, red
wine).
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini
MAOIs: Patient Information
• Instruct patients to avoid foods that
contain tyramine and provide a list of
these foods.
• Inform patients that effectiveness
occurs after about 2 weeks of therapy.
Focus on Pharmacology: Essentials for Health Professionals, Second Edition
Jahangir Moini