Title: Mood Disorders
1Mood Disorders
- Neurobiological Causes and Pharmacological
Intervention
2Key issues and questions
- Target of antidepressant or mood-stabilizing
drugs - People with Mood Disorders!
- What constitutes a Mood Disorder?
- What is the neurochemical basis of clinically
significant mood change? - What is the neurochemical basis of changes
produced by drugs that treat mood disorders? - How well do the drugs work?
3Mood Disorders
- The structure of mood disorders
- Normal affective responses on a continuum-brief
in duration vs. dominant and sustained - Unipolar Mood Disorder
- A state of depression (or mania)
- Mostly depression
- Bipolar Mood Disorder
- Alternation between depression and mania
- Subtypes
- Bipolar I (full manic episodes)
- Bipolar II (hypomanic episodes)
- Cyclothymia (moodiness up and down)
- Anxiety Disorders
4Nature of Unipolar Mood Disorders
- Depressive Disorders
- Melancholic depression (40-60)-symptoms
- Atypical depression (15)-symptoms
- Dysthymia-symptoms
- If there are different levels of depression, and
different types, is the underlying neurochemical
problem different in nature or degree? - Therefore, are pharmacological therapies
different for each subtype?
5Facts Statistics
- 7-8 lifetime prevalence
- Usually recurrent
- Major Depression or Dysthymia Females gt Males
- Mean age of onset 25 yrs
- 50 concordance for monozygotic twins
- Length of episode varies
- Remission is common
- Risk of suicide
- Bipolar Disorders Females Males
- Similar in children and adults, 80 concordance
in monozygotic twins
6Genetic influence on depression
Risk of developing unipolar depression increases
with multiple family members with depression
7Behaviors addressed by antidepressant drug use
- DSM IV Criteria 1-4 for major depressive episode
(5/9) - Persistence of depressed mood nearly every day (gt
2 weeks) - Diminished interest or pleasure, eg., loss of
libido (anhedonia and vegetative) - Weight fluctuations and loss of appetite
(vegetative) - Insomnia or hypersomnia (vegetative)
8Specific behavioral changes that need to be
targeted by antidepressant drugs
- DSM IV Criteria 5-9 for Depression
- Psychomotor agitation or retardation (feelings of
restlessness or being slowed down) - Fatigue or loss of energy
- Worthlessness guilt
- Inability to think, concentrate or act decisively
- Preoccupation with thoughts of death or suicidal
ideation
9Anxiety Disorders
- Panic Attack
- period of intense fear or discomfort in which the
following occurs sweating, trembling, choking,
chest pain, nausea, dizziness, fear of losing
control, derealization or depersonalization,
chills or hot flashes - Agoraphobia
- Panic Disorder w/o agoraphobia (GAD)
- Social Anxiety Disorder
- fear in social situations
- exposure to social situations provokes anxiety
- social situations avoided
- distress interferes with normal routine
- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
10Depression Subtypes
- Melancholic
- anxious, loss of pleasure in all activities
- dread future
- insomnia, early morning awakening
- loss of appetite
- symptoms worst in the morning
- excessive inappropriate guilt
- Atypical
- lethargic, fatigued
- increase in appetite
- symptoms best in morning
- extreme sensitivity to environmental stimuli
(perceived or actual/positive or negative)
- Dysthymia
- symptoms of depression chronic but less severe
11Physiological Correlates
- Neurochemical changes
- reduced or elevated norepinephrine levels
- differences in the number of serotonin receptors
- may be regulated by dysfunction in serotonin
activity - biogenic amine hypothesis
- Dysfunction in cortisol secretion
what is the basis of this elevation in cortisol?
12Stress Response
- CRF-corticotropin releasing factor
- orchestrates behavioral/endocrine/immune response
to stress-interaction with NE - interactions with brain areas responsible for
fear reaction, transforming experiences into
feeling and memory system - CRF administered to laboratory rats results in
symptoms of depression - excessive levels may explain behavioral symptoms
of sleep disturbances, appetite changes,
psychomotor symptoms - CRF has two receptor subtypes-novel targets of
antidepressant therapy?
13Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis
-
Hypothalamus
-
PFC
Hippocampus (glucocorticoid receptors)
CRH
-
Pituitary
ACTH
NE
Adrenal cortex
Cortisol
14Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis
-
Hypothalamus
-
PFC
Hippocampus (glucocorticoid receptors)
CRH
-
Pituitary
ACTH
5HT
Adrenal cortex
Cortisol
15Dexamethasone Suppression Test-not a diagnostic
tool
- Dexamethasone synthetic glucocorticoid
- Reduces ACTH production
- normal patients show
- reduction (suppression) in cortisol levels in
blood - depressed patients do not
- abnormal negative feedback loop-most prominent in
melancholic depression
16Dexamethasone Suppression Test-continued
- Some, but not all, depressed individuals show
lack of dexamethasone suppression of cortisone - Marginal differences between suppressors and
nonsuppressors in response to pharmacotherapy - Some depressed patients, despite elevated
cortisol, show no problems with adrenal or
pituitary glands
17Melancholic vs. Atypical Depression
- Melancholic hypercortisolism may explain
symptoms of depression - impaired feedback loop
- hyperactive, anxiety, insomnia, loss of appetite
- Atypical CRF does not stimulate cortisol
response - impaired feedback loop
- lethargic, fatigued, hyperphagic, hypersomnic,
18Animal Models of Depression
- Diathesis-Stress concept
- Antidepressant drugs screened on the following
preclinical paradigms - Behavioral Despair/Learned Helplessness
- HPA transgenic
- Olfactory Bulbectomy
19Biogenic Amine Hypothesis
- Evidence for
- altered serotonin and norepinephrine levels in
depressed and suicide victims (blood and CSF) - drugs which reduce NE/5-HT result in
depression/suicidal tendencies (reserpine) - drugs which elevate serotonin and NE (MAOi,
amphetamine) also alleviate symptoms
- Evidence against
- response to SSRIs is slow
- effect on serotonin reuptake is similar, but
between-patient variability - melancholic depressed patients show high NE -
may be driving by high CRF levels - answer not a simple relationship
20Action of Antidepressant Drugs on CNS
- Effects on the following
- Monoamine neurotransmitters
- Norepinephrine (noradrenaline) NE
- Dopamine DA
- Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) 5-HT
21Treatment of Depression
- Pharmacotherapy
- Tricyclic antidepressants (TCA)
- Heterocyclic or 2nd and 3rd generation
- Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI)
- Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)
- Non-Pharmacologic
- Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
22Action of Antidepressant Drugs on CNS
- Increase synaptic neurotransmitter levels
- Impair natural mechanisms for reducing monamine
actions - Reuptake pumps
- Enzymatic inactivation (MAO)
- Autoreceptors
- Alter receptor levels (after repeated use)
23Synaptic Effects
24drug inactivates monoamine oxidases
25Synaptic Transmission the Synapse
normal reuptake of NT substance from synaptic
cleft to presynaptic neuron
inhibition of reuptake pumps more NT in synapse
26Serotonin/Permissive Hypothesis
- Serotonin as inhibitory neurotransmitter
- Inhibit rage self rage (suicide?)
- Mood disorders release of inhibitory damper
- serotonin norepinephrine mania
- Balance of 5HT and NE regulates mood
27MAO metabolizes serotonin in the presynaptic
neuron
28Serotonergic Distribution in the Brain
29Synthesis of Norephinephrine
30Noradrenergic distribution in the brain
31Receptor Subtypes (transmembrane proteins)
- 5-HT
- nine know receptor subtypes
- grouped into class 1, 2 and 3
- 5-HT1a is both presynaptic (autofeedback loop)
and postsynaptic - NE
- acute use vs. chronic use
- altered sensitivity/number receptors
- which types?
32Classes of Antidepressant Therapy
- MAOi
- TCA
- Also used for anxiety disorders and pain
- Panic and phobia (MAO)
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (TCA)
- Pain (TCA)
- SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors)
- anxiety
- OCD clomipramine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine,
sertraline
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35The receptor hypothesis of antidepressant action
Alterations in receptor expression
36Receptor Subtypes in Depressed Patients
- Not all studies find an association
- Increased number if 5HT1a neurons
- increased inhibition of 5HT transmission
- Altered number of 5HT2 receptors
- Presynaptic and postsynaptic
- Changes match chronic stress animal model
37Therapeutic Lag
- Theory improved mood following SSRI treatment
corresponds to augmented serotonergic
transmission - this enhanced 5-HT activity is partially due to
autoreceptor blockade - New therapy combine SSRI with 5HT1a antagonist
- Problems antidepressant efficacy correlated
with postsynaptic 5HT1a receptor affinity
38The altered gene (s) hypothesis of antidepressant
action
- Excess neurotransmitter leads to alterations in
- Genes that code for receptors
- receptor expression
- sensitivity of receptors
- differences in expression in pre- and
post-synaptic receptors - upregulate or sensitize 5HT1a in hippocampus
- desensitize 5HT2 receptors elsewhere in the brain
- Genes that serve to protect and/or facilitate
neuronal function (eg., brain derived
neurotrophic factor) - BDNF does not appear to be associated with disease
39Relationship of SSRIs to BDNF levels and
neuronal function
40Interaction of stress, corticosteriods and
depression
41Side effects
- MAO inhibitors
- dietary restrictions
- serotonin syndrome-
- Tricyclic Antidepressants
- cardiac arrhythmias, respiratory depression
- serotonin syndrome
- severe sedation
42Side effects
- Blockade of NE uptake
- tachycardia
- tremors
- Blockade of 5-HT uptake
- GI disturbances
- interactions with l-tryptophan
- increase/decrease in anxiety (dose dependent)
- sexual dysfunction
- Blockade of histamine receptors
- potentiation of depressant drugs
- sedation
- weight gain
- hypotension
- Blockade of Ach receptors
- blurred vision,
- drymouth
- constipation
43Efficacy of Antidepressant Therapy
- Use of a placebo or active control (randomized,
controlled clinical trial) or any control - Consistency of study populations
- Efficacy of one group over another?
- Treatment guidelines
- dose, duration, compliance
- starting dose-enduring response
- patient compliance-adverse events
44Efficacy subtypes
- MAOi
- atypical and refractory (fail to respond to other
types of medications)
- TCA
- melancholic depression
- not effective in reactive depression
- SSRI
- mild to moderate depression
- better tolerated than TCAs
- do not take with MAOi
- Heterocyclics
- use when severe insomnia is present
- useful in elderly