Title: Treatment of Psychotic Disorders
1Treatment of Psychotic Disorders
- With a focus on Bipolar Disorder
2Outline
- History of Bipolar Disorder
- Symptoms of Bipolar Disorder
- Diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder
- Treatment of Bipolar Disorder
- Future of Bipolar Disorder
3History of Bipolar Disorder
- The earliest written descriptions of a
relationship between mania and melancholia are
attributed to Aretaeus of Cappadocia. Aretaeus
was an eclectic medical philosopher who lived in
Alexandria somewhere between 30 and 150 AD.
Aretaeus is recognized as having authored most of
the surviving texts referring to a unified
concept of manic-depressive illness, viewing both
melancholia and mania as having a common origin
in black bile. - Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926), a German psychiatrist
categorized and studied the natural course of
untreated bipolar patients long before mood
stabilizers were discovered. Describing these
patients in 1902, he coined the term manic
depressive psychosis. He noted in his patient
observations that intervals of acute illness,
manic or depressive, were generally punctuated by
relatively symptom-free intervals in which the
patient that was able to function normally.
- In 1949, John Cade discovered that lithium
carbonate could be used as a successful treatment
of manic depressive psychosis - In the 1950s, U.S. hospitals began experimenting
with lithium on their patients. - By the mid-1960s, reports started appearing in
the medical literature regarding lithium's
effectiveness. - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration did not
approve of lithium's use until 1970.
Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926)
4Symptoms of Bipolar Disorder
- Mania -
- Feeling very high on life
- Talking rapidly
- Feeling grandiose
- Racing thoughts and speech
- Erratic and impulsive actions
- Delusions and hallucinations (severe)
- Hypomania -
- Like but less severe that mania
- Euphoric, energetic and productive
- No hallucinations or delusions
- Characterized by an unusually good mood
- Depression -
- Feeling hopeless, sad or empty
- Fatigue, energy and concentration loss
- Thoughts of death or suicide
5Diagnosis Bipolar Disorder
- What is it?
- Not a single disorder but one of Mania and
Depression - Usually involves Rapid Cycling
- Subdivided
- Bipolar I - one or more manic or mixed episodes
with or without depressive episode - Bipolar II - one or more Major Depressive
Episodes along with at least one Hypomanic
episode - Cyclothymia - one or more Hypomanic episodes and
Dysthymic (chronic depression) episodes
6Brain scans indicating the differences in brain
activity when a patient is switching between a
depressive episode and hypomanic episode
Brain scans showing the increased amount of brain
matter with the use of lithium utilizing the
growth promoter called brain-derived neurotrophic
factor
7Treatments
- Medications
- Mood stabilizers - Lithium (Lithobid, Lithane,
Eskalith, ect.) - Anticonvulsants - Depakote, Tegretol
- Bipolar Depression - Lamotrigine
- Antipsychotic - Seroquel, Zyprexa, Risperdal,
ect. - Antidepressants are questionable due to the fact
that some believe that it induces a manic episode
especially if there is no mood stabilizers used. - Hospitalization
- May occur, especially with manic episodes. This
can be voluntary or involuntary. - Long-term inpatient stays are now less common due
to deinstitutionalization, although can still
occur. - Following a hospital admission, support services
available can include drop-in centers, visits
from members of a community mental health team or
Assertive Community Treatment team, supported
employment and patient-led support groups.
8Mood Stabilizer - Lithium
- Recent research suggests three different
mechanisms which may act together to deliver the
mood-stabilizing effect of this ion. - The excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate is the
key factor in understanding how lithium works. - Other mood stabilizers such as valproate and
lamotrigine exert influence over glutamate,
suggesting a possible biological explanation for
mania. - The other mechanisms by which lithium might help
to regulate mood include the alteration of gene
expression and the non-competitive inhibition of
an enzyme called inositol monophosphatase.
9Mood Stabilizer - Lithium
- Absorption
- Readily absorbed from the GI tract. Absorption is
not significantly impaired by food. T max is 0.5
to 3 h. Therapeutic serum level is 0.4 to 1
mEq/L. Steady state is reached in 5 to 7 days - Distribution
- Distribution space of lithium approximates that
of total body water. Not protein bound.
Distribution across the blood-brain barrier is
slow however, the CSF lithium level is about 40
of the plasma concentration - Elimination
- About 95 eliminated by the kidney primarily
excreted in the urine. Renal excretion is
proportional to its plasma concentration. The
half-life is about 24hrs.
10Eskalith
- Preclinical studies have shown that lithium
alters sodium transport in nerve and muscle cells
and effects a shift toward intraneuronal
metabolism of catecholamines, but the specific
biochemical mechanism of lithium action in mania
is unknown. - Indicated in the treatment of manic episodes of
manic-depressive illness. Maintenance therapy
prevents or diminishes the intensity of
subsequent episodes in those Bipolar patients
with a history of mania. - Fine hand tremor, polyuria, and mild thirst may
occur during initial therapy for the acute manic
phase, and may persist throughout treatment. - Transient and mild nausea and general discomfort
may also appear during the first few days of
lithium administration.These side effects usually
subside with continued treatment or a temporary
reduction or cessation of dosage. - If persistent, cessation of lithium therapy may
be required. - Diarrhea, vomiting, drowsiness, muscular
weakness, and lack of coordination may be early
signs of lithium intoxication, and can occur at
lithium levels below 2.0 mEq/L - Because lithium theraputic levels are so close to
the toxic levels lithium concentration levels
must be monitored constantly and before treatment
is given
11Depakote
- Dissociates to the valproate ion in the
gastrointestinal tract. The mechanisms by which
valproate exerts its therapeutic effects have not
been established. It has been suggested that its
activity in epilepsy is related to increased
brain concentrations of gamma-aminobutyric acid
(GABA). - Depakote ER (divalproex sodium extended-release)
is indicated for the treatment of acute manic or
mixed episodes associated with bipolar disorder,
with or without psychotic features - Side Effects
- Fever, sore throat, body aches, diarrhea,
tremors, ect.
12Lamotrigine
- Lamotrigine tablets are indicated for the
maintenance treatment of Bipolar I Disorder to
delay the time to occurrence of mood episodes
(depression, mania, hypomania, mixed episodes) in
patients treated for acute mood episodes with
standard therapy. - If used in conjunction with valproate (Depakote)
the dosing should be cut in half due to the
absorption rate in its presence. - Side effects
- Dizziness, headache, blurred or double vision,
nausea, vomiting, rash, ect.
13Seroquel
- Used in the treatment of both depressive episodes
and acute manic episodes associated with Bipolar
I disorder - It has been proposed that the efficacy of
Seroquel in its mood stabilizing properties in
bipolar depression and mania are mediated through
a combination of dopamine type 2 (D2) and
serotonin type 2 (5HT2) antagonism. - Antagonism at receptors other than dopamine and
5HT2 with similar receptor affinities may explain
some of the other effects of Seroquel.
- Tardive Dyskinesia - A syndrome of potentially
irreversible, involuntary, dyskinetic movements
may develop in patients treated with
antipsychotic drugs. - Chronic antipsychotic treatment should generally
be reserved for patients who appear to suffer
from a chronic illness that (1) is known to
respond to antipsychotic drugs, and (2) for whom
alternative, equally effective drugs have no
effect
14Problems with Bipolar Disorder
- Many things are unknown about Bipolar Disorder
including - Mechanisms
- Causes
- Exact Treatments
- Prevention
- Not only are these things not known about the
disorder but the implications of the drugs on the
body are not completely known either. - The complete mapping of the human genome will
help with these issues and the research being
done on neurotransmitters will also help.
15Future of Disorder
- It has been discovered that lithium protects
neurons by increasing the levels of a
neuroprotective protein called Bcl-2. - Lithium has been found to help stimulate the
production of new neurons (neurogenesis) in the
hippocampus part of the limbic system that
control emotions and behavior. - A major breakthrough came in 2000, with the
demonstration that lithium increases the amount
of gray matter in the human brain, probably by
stimulating the production of a growth promoter
called brain-derived neurotrophic factor - When the researchers compared the brains of
bipolar patients on lithium with those of people
without the disorder and those of bipolar
patients not on lithium, they found that the
volume of gray matter in the brains of those on
lithium was as much as 15 percent higher in the
cingulate and paralimbic regions of the brain,
that are critical for attention, motivation and
emotional control.
16Works Cited
- www.drugs.com
- www.wikipedia.org
- www.wrongdiagnosis.com
- www.helpguide.org
- http//richardgpettymd.blogs.com/my_weblog/neuroto
xicity