Title: Drugs Affecting the Autonomic Nervous System
1Drugs Affecting the Autonomic Nervous System
- Pharmacology 49.222
- Bill Diehl-Jones RN, PhD
- Faculty of Nursing and Department of Zoology
2Agenda
- A Zen Review
- Overview of CNS and ANS
- Neurotransmitters and 2nd Messengers
- Cholinergic Agonists and Antagonists
- Adrenergic Agonists and Antagonists
- Movement Disorder Drugs
3Organization of the Nervous SystemCNS
- Three divisions of brain
- Forebrain
- cerebral hemispheres
- Midbrain
- Corpora quadrigemini, tegmentum, cerebral
peduncles - Hindbrain
- Cerebellum, pons, medulla
- Brainstem
- Midbrain, medulla, pons
- Connects cerebrum, cerebeluum, spinal cord
4Organization of the Nervous SystemReticular
Activating System
- Key Regulatory Functions
- CV, respiratory systems
- Wakefulness
- Clinical Link
- Disturbances in the RAS are linked to sleep-wake
disturbances
Radiation Fibres
Thalamus
Visual Inputs
Reticular Formation
Ascending Sensory Tracts
5Organization of the Peripheral Nervous System
- Three major divisions
- Efferent
- Somatic (motor)
- Autonomic
- Sympathetic and Parasympathetic
- Afferent
- Sensory
6Some Basic PlumbingThe Peripheral Nervous System
7Preganglionic Nerves
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
- Sympathetic AND Parasympathetic preganglionic
fibres release Acetylcholine (ACh) - ACh has two types of receptors
- Muscarinic and Nicotinic
- Postganglionic nerves have Nicotinic receptors
ACh
8Postganglionic Nerves
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
- Sympathetics release Norepinephrine
- Parasympathetics release ACh
- Norepinephrine binds to adrenergic receptors
- ACh binds to Muscarinic receptors
ACh
NE
9What Happens at the Effectors?
- NE from postganglionic sympathetics binds to
Adrenergic Receptors - ACh from postganglionic parasympathetics binds to
Muscarinic Receptors
ACh
NE
Muscarinic Receptor
Adrenergic Receptor
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
10Cholinergic Neurons
Na Choline
Acetylation
Ca
?
Acetylcholinesterase
Receptor
11Cholinergic Receptors
- Muscarinic receptors come in 5 flavours
- M1, M2, M3, M4, M5
- Found in different locations
- Research is on-going to identify specific
agonists and antagonists - Nicotinic receptors come in 1 flavour
12Cholinergic Agonists
- Acetylcholine
- Bethanechol
- Carbachol
- Pilocarpine
13General Effects of Cholinergic Agonists
- Decrease heart rate and cardiac output
- Decrease blood pressure
- Increases GI motility and secretion
- Pupillary constriction
14Cholinergic Antagonists
- Antimuscarinic agents
- Atropine, ipratropium
- Ganglion blockers
- nicotine
- Neuromuscular blockers
- Vecuronium, tubocuarine, pancuronium
15Where are some of these drugs used?
16Atropine(a cholinergic antagonist)
- Comes from Belladonna
- High affinity for muscarinic receptors
- Causes mydriasis (dilation of the pupil) and
cycloplegia - Useful for eye exams, tmt of organophosphate
poisoning, antisecretory effects - Side effects?
17Scopalamine(also a cholinergic antagonist)
- Also from Belladonna
- Peripheral effects similar to atropine
- More CNS effects
- Anti-motion sickness
- amnesiac
18Trimethaphan(yet another cholinergic antagonist)
- Competitive nicotinic ganglion blocker
- Used to lower blood pressure in emergencies
19Neuromuscular Blockers
- Look like acetylcholine
- Either work as antagonists or agonists
- Two flavours
- Non-depolarizing (antagonist)
- Eg tubocurarine
- Block ion channels at motor end plate
- Depolarizing (agonist)
- Eg succinylcholine
- Activates receptor
20Turbocurarine
- Used during surgery to relax muscles
- Increase safety of anaesthetics
- Do not cross blood-brain barrier
ACh
Na
Curare
Nicotinic Receptor
Na Channel
21Succinylcholine
- Uses
- endotracheal intubations
- What is this?
- Why?
- electroconvulsive shock therapy
- Problem can cause apnea
Na
-
-
-
-
-
-
Phase I
Na
-
-
-
-
-
-
Phase II
22Adrenergic Neurons
Na Tyrosine
Dopa
MAO
Ca
Dopamine
?
Dopamine is converted to epinephrine
Receptor
23Word of the Day
- SYMPATHOMIMETIC
- Adrenergic drug which acts directly on adrenergic
receptor, activating it
24Adrenergic Agonists
- Direct
- Albuterol
- Dobutamine
- Dopamine
- Isoproteranol
- Indirect
- Amphetamine
- Mixed
- Ephidrine
25Adrenergic Receptors
- Two Families
- Alpha and Beta
- Based on affinity to adrenergic agonists
- Alpha affinity
- epinephrinenorepinephrinegtgt isoproteranol
- Beta affinity
- Isoproteranolgtepinephrinegt norepinephrine
Epinephrine
Norepinephrine
Isoproteranol
Epinephrine
Norepinephrine
Isoproteranol
26What do these receptors do?
- Alpha 1
- Vasoconstriction, ? BP, ? tonus sphincter muscles
- Alpha 2
- Inhibit norepinephrine, insulin release
- Beta 1
- Tachycardia, ? lipolysis, ? myocardial
contractility - Beta 2
- Vasodilation, bronchodilation, ?insulin release
27Adrenergic Angonists
- Direct acting
- Epinephrine interacts with both alpha and beta
- Low dose mainly beta effects (vasodilation)
- High dose alpha effects (vasoconstriction)
- Therapeutic uses emerg tmt of asthma, glaucoma,
anaphyslaxis - (what about terbutaline?)
28Adrenergic Agonists
- Indirect
- Cause NE release only
- Example
- Amphetamine
- CNS stimulant
- Increases BP by alpha effect on vasculature, beta
effect on heart
29Mixed-Action
- Causes NE release AND stimulates receptor
- Example
- Ephedrine
- What type of drug?
- Alpha and beta stimulant
- Use asthma, nasal sprays
- slower action
30Adrenergic Antagonists
- Alpha blockers
- Eg Prazosin
- Selective alpha 1 blocker
- Tmt hypertension
- relaxes arterial and venous smooth muscle
- Causes first dose response (what is this?)
31Adrenergic Antagonists
- Beta Blockers
- Example Propranolol
- Non-selective (blocks beta 1 and beta 2)
- Effects
- ? cardiac output, vasodilation,
bronchoconstriction
32Adrenergic Antagonists
- Eg Atenolol, Metoprolol
- Preferentially block beta 1 no beta effects (why
is this good?) - Partial Agonists
- Pindolol, acebutolol
- Weakly stimulate beta 1 and beta 2
- Causes less bradycardia
33Adrenergic Antagonists
- Eg Nadolol
- Nonselective beta blocker
- Used for glaucoma
- Eg Labetolol
- Alpha AND beta blocker
- Used in treating PIH
34Drugs that Affect Uptake/Release
- Eg Cocaine
- Blocks Na/K ATPase
- Prevents reuptake of epinephrine/norepinephrine
35Treatment of Movement Disorders
36What Regulates Movement?
- Basal Ganglia are involved
37Example Parkinsonss Disease
38FRONTAL SECTION OF BRAINSherwood, 2001 p 145
39BASAL GANGLIA contd
- Role of basal ganglia
- 1. Inhibit muscle tone throughout the body
- 2. Select maintain purposeful motor activity
- while suppressing useless/unwanted patterns
of movement - 3. Coordination of slow, sustained movements
(especially those related to posture support) - 4. Help regulate activity of the cerebral cortex
40BASAL GANGLIA SYSTEM
- Feedback loops - complex
- - form direct
indirect pathways
- balance
excitatory inhibitory
activities - Neurotransimitters
- Excitatory - ACh Inhibitory - dopamine
- glutamate GABA
41DOPAMINE
- major NT regulating subconscious movements of
skeletal muscles - majority located in the terminals of pathway
stretching from the neuronal cell bodies in SNc
to the striatum - generally inhibits the function of striatal
neurons striatal outputs - when dopamine production is ?, a chemical
imbalance occurs affecting movement, balance and
gait
42PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF PARKINSONS DISEASE
- Major pathological features
- 1. Death of dopamine producing cells in the SNc
- leads to overactivation of the indirect pathway
- 2. Presence of Lewy bodies small eosinophilic
inclusions found in the neurons of SNc - Results in- degeneration of the nigrostriatal
pathway - - decreased thalamic excitation of the
motor cortex -
434. Drug of Choice LEVODOPA
- Why is it used?
- - virtually all pts with PD show
a response to
levodopa - - improves quality of life
- - in use since 1960s
- - easy to administer
(non-invasive) - - relatively inexpensive
- - useful in diagnosing PD
- Mechanism of action is a precursor to dopamine
helps restore the balance of dopamine in striatum - most effective in combo with Carbidopa (? s
levodopas peripheral conversion to dopamine)
445. OTHER APPROACHES TO TREATMENT
- Pharmacological
- Dopamine agonists ie. Bromocriptine or pergolide
mesylate - Selective inhibitor of type B monoamine oxidase
ie.Selegiline - Antivirals ie. Amantadine
- Anticholinergics ie. Trihexyphenidyl
- COMT inhibitors ie. Entacapone
45APPROACHES contd
- Surgical
- Pallidotomy Thalotomy
- microelectrode destruction of specific site in
the basal ganglia - Deep brain stimulation
- electrode implantation with external pacemaker
- Fetal nigral transplantation
- Implantation of embryonic dopaminergic neurons
into the substantia nigra for growth and supply
of dopamine