A Textbook of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics

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128 MOVEMENT DISORDERS AND DEGENERATIVE CNS DISEASE


Adverse effects
These include the following:


  • dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation;

  • precipitation of glaucoma or urinary retention – they are
    therefore contraindicated in narrow angle glaucoma and
    in men with prostatic hypertrophy;

  • cognitive impairment, confusion, excitement or psychosis,
    especially in the elderly.


Pharmacokinetics
Table 21.1 lists some drugs of this type that are in common
use, together with their major pharmacokinetic properties.

SPASTICITY


Spasticity is an increase in muscle tone, for example, due to
damage to upper motor neurone pathways following stroke or
in demyelinating disease. It can be painful and disabling.
Treatment is seldom very effective. Physiotherapy, limited sur-
gical release procedures or local injection of botulinum toxin
(see below) all have a role to play. Drugs that reduce spasticity
includediazepam,baclofen,tizanidineanddantrolene, but
they have considerable limitations.
Diazepam (see Chapter 18, Hypnotics and anxiolytics)
facili-tatesγ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) action. Although spas-
ticity and flexor spasms may be diminished, sedating doses are
often needed to produce this effect.
Baclofenfacilitates GABA-B receptors and also reduces
spasticity. Less sedation is produced than by equi-effective
doses of diazepam, but baclofencan cause vertigo, nausea and
hypotension. Abrupt withdrawal may precipitate hyperactiv-
ity, convulsions and autonomic dysfunction. There is specialist
interest in chronic administration of low doses of baclofen
intrathecally via implanted intrathecal cannulae in selected
patients in order to maximize efficacy without causing side
effects.
Dantrolene(a ryanodine receptor antagonist) is generally
less useful for symptoms of spasticity than baclofenbecause
muscle power is reduced as spasticity is relieved. It is used
intravenously to treat malignant hyperthermia and the neu-
roleptic malignant syndrome, for both of which it is uniquely
effective (see Chapter 24). Its adverse effects include:


  • drowsiness, vertigo, malaise, weakness and fatigue;

  • diarrhoea;

  • increased serum potassium levels.


potentiated. Hypertensive reactions to tyramine-containing
products (e.g. cheese or yeast extract) have been described,
but are rare. Amantadineand centrally active antimuscarinic
agents potenti-ate the anti-parkinsonian effects of selegiline.
Levodopa-induced postural hypotension may be potentiated.


DRUGS AFFECTING THE CHOLINERGIC SYSTEM

MUSCARINIC RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS


Use


Muscarinic antagonists (e.g. trihexyphenidyl,benzatropine,
orphenadrine,procyclidine) are effective in the treatment of
parkinsonian tremor and – to a lesser extent – rigidity, but pro-
duce only a slight improvement in bradykinesia. They are
usually given in divided doses, which are increased every two
to five days until optimum benefit is achieved or until adverse
effects occur. Their main use is in patients with parkinsonism
caused by antipsychotic agents.


Mechanism of action


Non-selective muscarinic receptor antagonism is believed to
restore, in part, the balance between dopaminergic/cholinergic
pathways in the striatum.


Table 21.1 :Common muscarinic receptor antagonists, dosing and pharmacokinetics

Drug Route of Half-life (hours) Metabolism and Special features
administration excretion
Trihexyphenidyl Oral 3–7 Hepatic
Orphenadrine Oral 13.7–16.1 Hepatic-active Central
metabolite stimulation
Procyclidine Oral 12.6 Hepatic

Key points
Treatment of Parkinson’s disease


  • A combination of levodopa and a dopa-decarboxylase
    inhibitor (carbidopa or benserazide) or a dopamine
    agonist (e.g. ropinirole) are standard first-line therapies.

  • Dopamine agonists and COMT inhibitors (e.g.
    entacapone) are helpful as adjuvant drugs for patients
    with loss of effect at the end of the dose interval, and
    to reduce ‘on–off’ motor fluctuations.

  • The benefit of early treatment with an MAO-B
    inhibitor, selegiline, to retard disease progression is
    unproven, and it may even increase mortality.

  • Polypharmacy is almost inevitable in patients with
    longstanding disease.

  • Ultimately, disease progression requires increasing drug
    doses with a regrettable but inevitable increased
    incidence of side effects, especially involuntary
    movements and psychosis.

  • Anticholinergic drugs reduce tremor, but dose-limiting
    CNS side effects are common, especially in the elderly.
    These drugs are first-line treatment for parkinsonism
    caused by indicated (essential) antipsychotic drugs.

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