NEUROTRANSMITTERS
Antidepressants
Mood Stabilizers
Anti-Anxieties
Anti-Psychotics
100

The definition of a neurotransmitter

What is they are chemical messengers of the nerve cells.

They transmit electrical impulses in the brain and central nervous system.

100

The most dangerous side effect of being put on an antidepressant (mostly with SSRI's)

What is suicidal ideation until drug is at therapeutic levels.

100

What diagnosis does someone typically have that are placed on a mood stabilizer?

What is Bipolar disorder

100

The most commonly used classification of anti-anxiety medication

What are the benzodiazapines

100

These are the two classifications of antipsychotic medications.

What are first generation (conventionals) and second generation (atypicals)

200

This is what CAMP stands for

What is Cholinergics, Amino Acids, Monoamines, Peptides

200

Common non-life threatening side effects of the SSRI's 

What is anxiety, GI disturbance, sexual dysfunction, and insomnia

200

Name the first line treatment for Bipolar disorder

What is Lithium

200

What should be avoided with the use of Benzodiazapines

What is alcohol due to potential for respiratory depression.

200

This is the main neurotransmitter affected with use of antipsychotic medications.

What is Dopamine. They block dopamine receptors to allow less dopamine to cross the synapse.

300

This is how the neurotransmitter makes electrical impulses happen.

What is they send a neurotransmitter from the pre-synaptic nerve ending to receptor sites on the post-synaptic nerve ending. 

The Na+/K+ pump creates an action potential that causes the neurotransmitter to be sent. 

Once it reaches the receptor site, the action potential happens.

300
Foods that need to be avoided when taking a Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor

Wines, most cheeses, ripe avocado, fermented meats, figs. smoked fish, yeast.

300

What part of the Bipolar disorder is Lithium thought to treat?

What is it treats both depression and mania but particularly useful in treating mania.

300

This drug is commonly prescribed for generalized anxiety disorder due to its less sedating effects and less potential for dependance. 

What is Buspar (buspirone)

300

List 2 extrapyramidal side effects caused by the first generation antipsychotics.

What are Dystonia (muscle stiffness), Pseudoparkinsons, Akathisia (restlessness), Tardive dyskinesia (involuntary tongue darting, movement of eyes and lips uncontrollably)

400

This is what happens to the neurotransmitter after it is used.

Give at least one example

What is it gets reuptaken to the pre-synaptic nerve ending, or broken down by an enzyme that digests it, or via diffusion.

400

Why would a patient on a Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor be at risk for hypertensive crisis?

What is taking another drug that also contains increased amount of epi, nor-epi, or dopamine can cause too much of these leading to a hypertensive crisis.

400

What is a secondary medication that can be paired with Lithium in the treatment of Bipolar disorder?

What are the Anticonvulsant drugs- these work as anti-mania agents

Most often Depakote/Depakene (valproate)

400

This drug is sometimes prescribed to help induce quality sleep

What is Ambien (zolpidem) "Z-hypnotics"

Not used for anxiety

400

We know that patients on antipsychotics do not like to take their medications. We can do this to enhance medication compliance with the antipsychotics.

Reality testing- they think we are trying to harm them with the medications. They will tell you they are "bad". 

Educate that just because they feel better, does not mean they are cured. 

Inpatient/outpatient medication compliance programs.



500

Name each of the CAMP neurotransimitters by name

C= acetylcholine

A= GABA 

M= Dopamine

      Serotonin

      Norepinephrine

P- Substance P

500

Why are the Cyclic antidepressants termed "dirty drugs"

These drugs are rapidly absorbed and leads to cardiotoxicity.

Lots of negative side effects= dry mouth, blurred vision, urinary retention, constipation, confusion, orthostatic hypotension, weight gain.

500
These are some of the most common side effects of Lithium

Increased thirst, excessive urination, weight gain, n/v/d, tremors, hyponatremia ( in the presence of high lithium levels), kidney dysfunction, thyroid dysfunction.

500

These are some alternative medications to help with anxiety (non-benzos, non-hypnotics)

What are beta blockers (inderal and toprol) effective for performance anxiety. Antihistamines- due to sedative effects.

500

Benefit of taking a second generation over a first generation antipsychotic

Less chance for EPS but is more expensive.

1000

What are each of the CAMP neurotransmitters responsible for?

What is- Acetylcholine- muscle movement

GABA- anxiety control

Dopamine- pleasure/mood/fine motor

Serotonin- mood/anxiety/sexual arousal/memory/sleep

Norepinephrine- fight or flight response

Substance P- pain regulation

1000

Name one prototype drug from each of the following classifications:SSRI, MAOI, Cyclics, Atypicals

What is SSRI= Prozac (fluoxetine), Zoloft (sertraline)

MAOI- Nardil (phenelzine)

Cyclics- Elavil (amitriptyline), Pamelor (nortriptyline)

Atypical- Welbutrin (bupropion)

1000

Things you should teach your patient who is taking Lithium

What is fluid intake of 2000-3000/day due to excessive fluid loss from urination, n/v/d. 

Avoid activity that can cause excessive diaphoresis due to sodium/fluid loss.

Onset of action up to 2 weeks with therapeutic levels at 3 months, need for lithium level weekly for first several weeks then every 1-3 months.

Easy to lead to lithium toxicity due to narrow therapeutic index.

1000

Patient teaching for use of benzodiazapines

May cause drowsiness, do not drive while taking, do not take every day, may cause dependance, do not combine with alcohol or opiates for potential for resp depression, decreases REM sleep, may lead to Alzheimers with regular long term use. Do not quit cold turkey- may lead to sz.

1000

Nursing implications for first gen vs second gen antipsychotics.

First gen- EPS side effects to look out for. Treat with antihistamine, but TD can be permanent., orthostatic hypotension.

Second gen.- Risk of metabolic syndrome (weight gain, hypertension, blood glucose, lipids.