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8 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Clinical Guidelines for Prescribing Psychotropic Drugs: The 5 D’s
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Diagnosis
Careful diagnostic evaluation to identify specific target symptoms Drug selection Choice of drug based on patient factors, etc. Dosage Adequate dosing and trial of medication Duration Adequate duration before assuming failure Dialogue Discuss SE and expectations with patient |
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• Describe psychotropic use in special populations:
children elderly pregnant/nursing medically ill |
Children
Begin with small doses and increase until clinical effects are observed Elderly Start with ½ the usual starting dose and increase slowly Pregnant and Nursing Women All psychotropic medications cross the placenta Try to avoid during pregnancy (esp. 1st trimester) or when nursing Consider ECT in severe cases Medically Ill Persons Treat using most conservative clinical practice |
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what is Serotonin Syndrome? cause? sx? tx?
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Cause
Administration of drugs that can raise plasma serotonin concentration 22% SSRI OD/ MAOI/Tramadol Symptoms Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea Restlessness Extreme agitation Confusion Hyperreflexia Autonomic instability Myoclonus, seizures, *** hyperthermia, shivering, rigidity Delirium, coma, CV collapse, death Treatment Stop offending agents Supportive care Control agitation (benzodiazepines) Control autonomic instability Control hyperthermia 5-HT2A antagonists (cyproheptadine, olanzapine) |
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what is Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome? clinical findings?
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Cause
Complication of neuroleptic drugs Typicals > Atypicals Clozapine + lithium Clinical Features Hyperthermia Autonomic instability Extreme muscle rigidity, tremor Mental status change, confusion Dystonia or akinesia Mutism Agitation Leukocytosis Elevated CPK Coma, death |
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define the following Extra Pyramidal Symptoms:
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Parkinsonism
A movement disorder which mimics the signs & symptoms of idiopathic Parkinson’s disease--give anticholinergic Akathisia A severe form of restlessness associated with a compulsion to move Dystonia Spasms or muscle stiffness usually most prominent in head and neck, which occur early in the course of treatment or with dose increases |
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what is the Most effective treatment for mood disorders, that is used for rapid response. One side effect is potentially forgetting large portions of your life
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ElectroConvulsive Therapy
Most Common Indications Major depressive disorder Bipolar disorder – depression or mania Refractory schizophrenia Catatonia (in mood disorders or schizophrenia) Mood disorders in pregnancy Relative Contraindications Increased intracranial pressure (NPH, benign intracranial hypertension, etc.) Intracranial lesions (tumor, hematoma, aneurysm, AVM, etc.) Recent myocardial infarction (< 3 months) Recent stroke Unstable aortic aneurysm |
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A collective term for a set of late-onset and sometimes irreversible disorders which can include chorea, dysphonia, dystonia, tics, and myoclonus
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Tardive Dyskinesia
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tx for Depression w/ seasonal pattern
Adjunct in non-seasonal depression Sleep disorders (e.g., shiftwork, jet lag) OCD w/ seasonal pattern |
Phototherapy
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