drug therapy

    Cards (10)

    • antipsychotics: 

      used to treat psychotic illnesses such as Sz and bipolar disorder
      recommended as the initial treatment for the symptoms of Sz
      a combination of medication and psychological therapies are used, CBT
      they work by reducing dopaminergic transmission: reducing the action of the neurotransmitter in areas of the brain associated with symptoms of Sz and blocking D2 receptor sites
      thought that Sz produce too much dopamine or have more dopamine receptors than non-Sz
      can't decrease or reduce the number of receptors so we block them using typical antipsychotics
    • antipsychotics
      positive symptoms of Sz are caused by an excess of dopamine in sub-cortical areas especially in the mesolimbic pathway
      negative symptoms are thought to arise from a deficit in dopamine in the mesocortical pathways
      typical: (1950's) chlorpromazine, used to combat positive symptoms
      atypical: (1970's) clozapine used to combat positive and negative
    • how the drugs work
      typical: dopamine antagonists
      block D2 receptors sites at the synapse in the brain reducing the action of dopamine, normalises dopamine levels and reduced hallucinations
      chlorpromazine has a sedation effect and reduces anxiety
      atypical: to improve the effectiveness of typical drugs
      reduce some of the side effects of typical drugs, target dopamine, serotonin and glutamate receptor sites, improves mood and cognitive function
      risperidone is a newer antipsychotic drug but works in small doses
    • side effects
      typical-
      mild: dizziness, sleepiness, agitation, dry mouth
      moderate: lip-smacking, grimacing, constipation
      severe: tardive dyskinesia (uncontrollable muscle movement in face), tremor, fever and altered mental capacity
      atypical- more manageable and not as long lasting
      mild: dizziness, sleepiness, dry mouth
      moderate: weight gain, grimacing, constipation, cardiovascular issues
    • typical: 1950's to reduce the effects of dopamine
      typical antipsychotics are dopamine antagonists as they bind to dopamine receptors and block their actions
      effectiveness of dopamine antagonists led to the development of the dopamine hypothesis
      kapur et al (2000) estimate that between 60% and 75% of dopamine receptors in the mesolimbic pathway need to be blocked to be effective
      however this results in side effects
    • atypical: 

      second generation: 3 main differences
      low risk of extrapyramidal side effects
      beneficial effect on negative symptoms and cognitive impairment
      suitable for treatment-resistant patients
      also act by blocking dopamine receptors but only temporarily
      then rapidly dissociate to allow normal dopamine transmission
      they do have the same effects on movement as typical drugs
    • evaluation: antipsychotics compared to placebo
      studies have compared relapse rates of both drugs
      Leutch et al (2012) carried out a meta-analysis of 65 studies involving 6000 patients all p's had been stabilised on either typical or atypical antipsychotics, some p's were then take off antipsychotics and given a placebo instead, within 12 months 64% of placebo patients relapsed compared to 27%
    • evaluation: extrapyramidal side effects
      typical drugs can produce movement problems for the patient, they effect the extrapyramidal area of the brain that helps control motor activity
      most common: parkinsonian symptoms which resemble the features of Parkinson's disease
      the symptoms can be so severe patients may stop taking the drug
    • evaluation: ethical problems
      critics argue that is the side effects, death and psychological consequences were taken into account a cost-benefit analysis would be negative
      in the US, a large court settlement was given to tardive dyskinesia sufferer on the basis of violating the human rights acts -'no one shall be subjected to inhuman or degraded treatment
      which drugs are better:
      atypical: gained more weight
      typical: experienced more extrapyramidal side effects
      concluded no differences in efficacy, just side effects
    • issues and debates
      economic implications: patients get back into work and deal symptoms but the productivity and experience of patients is important
      reductionism vs holism:
      drug therapy follow the lowest level of explanation (biological) when we should be diagnosing and treating using the holistic experience simplest explanation good for targeted treatment, not as good as it misses other factors of Sz
      nature vs nurture: drug therapy vs psychological treatments (CBT)
      interactional approach is needed for treatment, drugs +CBT works better than drugs alone