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Hypnotics and Sedatives PDF

The document discusses various types of sedative and hypnotic drugs used to treat insomnia. It describes the normal sleep cycle and defines sedatives and hypnotics. It categorizes insomnia and discusses treatment based on duration. The main classes of sedative/hypnotic drugs discussed are benzodiazepines, non-benzodiazepine hypnotics, atypical anxiolytics, beta-adrenergic antagonists, and barbiturates. Their mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic uses, and adverse effects are summarized.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
122 views35 pages

Hypnotics and Sedatives PDF

The document discusses various types of sedative and hypnotic drugs used to treat insomnia. It describes the normal sleep cycle and defines sedatives and hypnotics. It categorizes insomnia and discusses treatment based on duration. The main classes of sedative/hypnotic drugs discussed are benzodiazepines, non-benzodiazepine hypnotics, atypical anxiolytics, beta-adrenergic antagonists, and barbiturates. Their mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic uses, and adverse effects are summarized.

Uploaded by

Sayan Nag
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DR.

SUKANTA SEN
Professor
Deptt. Of Pharmacology
Normal sleep cycle consists of- NREM & REM phase.

A sedative drug decreases activity, moderates excitement, and calms


the recipient,
whereas a hypnotic drug produces drowsiness and facilitates the onset
and maintenance of a state of sleep that resembles natural sleep in its
electroencephalographic characteristics and from which the recipient can
be aroused easily.

Categories of Insomnia. The National Institute of Mental Health


Consensus Development Conference (1984) divided insomnia into three
categories:
Insomnia is one of the most common complaints in general
medical practice, and its treatment is predicated on proper
diagnosis.
Categories of Insomnia:

Transient insomnia lasts less than 3 days and usually is


caused by a brief environmental or situational stressor.
 It may respond to attention to sleep hygiene rules.
If hypnotics are prescribed, they should be used at the lowest
dose and for only 2 to 3 nights.
Short-term insomnia lasts from 3 days to 3 weeks and
usually is caused by a personal stressor such as illness, grief, or
job problems. Again, sleep hygiene education is the first step.
Hypnotics may be used adjunctively for 7 to 10 nights.
Hypnotics are best used intermittently during this time, with the
patient skipping a dose after 1 to 2 nights of good sleep.

Long-term insomnia is insomnia that has lasted for more than 3


weeks; no specific stressor may be identifiable. A more complete
medical evaluation is necessary in these patients, but most do not
need an all-night sleep study.
Classification of Sedative & hypnotic drugs
Benzodiazepines
Hypnotics Anxiolytics
Diazepam Diazepam
Nitrazepam Alprazolam
Lorazepam Oxazepam
Temazepam Lorazepam
Triazolam Flurazepam
Midazolam Chlordiazepoxide

Anti-convulsants
Diazepam
Clonazepam
Clobazepam
2. Non-Benzodiazepine Hypnotics
Zopiclone,Zolpidem, Zaleplon

3. Atypical Anxiolytics-
Buspirone, Ipsapirone, Gepirone

4. β-Adrenergic Antagonists-
Propranolol

5.Barbiturates- Now obsolete,have been superseded by


benzodiazepines
Long Acting Short Acting Ultra-short Acting
Phenobarbital Pentobarbital Thiopental
Mephobarbital Secobarbital Methohexital
Amobarbital
BENZODIAZEPINES-difference with Barbiturates
●They do not provide anesthesia even in higher doses.
●These are not enzyme inducers & hence do not lead
to metabolic tolerance.
●BZDs have a very low abuse liability.
●BZDs do not affect REM sleep and cause lesser
distortion of normal hypnogram.
●BZDs show no hyperalgesia.
●Hypnotic doses of BZDs do not affect respiration or
cardiovascular functions.
Site of Action:
LIMBIC SYSTEM,MIDBRAIN Ascending RAS,some actions on
medullary site & cerebellum.

Mechanism of Action:
Normally a balance between excitatory inputs(mostly Glutaminergic) and
the inhibitory inputs( mainly GABAergic) determines the prevailing level
of neural activity in limbic system and RAS of the brain.
GABA receptors: GABAA & GABAB

● GABAA receptors located postsynaptically, of which causes


hyperpolarization & directly linked with Cl- ion channels,opening
reduction in membrane excitability.
•GABAB receptors which are GPCRs.
•Their activation decreases cAMP formation.
•They cause pre- and postsynaptic inhibition by
inhibiting Ca+ channel opening &
increasing K+ conductance.

GABAA receptor has several binding sites:-
-The neurotransmitter GABA-binding site.
-The modulatory sites to bind BZDs, their
antagonists like Flumazenil and inverse agonists such
as β-carbolines.
-The modulatory as well as blocking site at Cl- ion
channel.
GABA A receptors are the target for several imp.
centrally acting drugs like
BZDs,Barbiturates,Neurosteriods and Picrotoxin.
BZDs which have powerful SEDATIVE and
ANXIOLYTIC effects, selectively bind, with high
affinity, to the Modulatory site on GABA A receptor in
such a way that the binding of GABA to GABAA receptor
is facilitated.
This modulatory site of GABA A receptor is
DISTINCT from the GABA BINDING SITE, referred as
“BZD receptor”.
BZDs neither substitute for GABA, nor activate
GABAa receptor but rather enhance binding of GABA to
the GABA binding site.
They appear to increase the Frequency (rather the
Duration) of GABA gated chloride channel opening.
BZD Inverse Agonists, Antagonists and Diazepam-
Binding Inhibitor :

Endogenous decapeptide called “diazepam binding


inhibitor” has been isolated from rat brain.
It inhibits Cl- channel opening by GABA.
Agonists like diazepam facilitate,
while inverse agonists like β-carbolines hinder
GABA mediated Cl- channel opening.

BZD Antagonist- Flumazenil, used clinically to


reverse BZD anesthesia and BZD overdose.
PHARMACOKINETIC CHARACTERISTICS:
-Variable oral absorption.
-Cross placental barrier
-More than 90% plasma –protein binding.
-No significant drug displacement reaction-d/t marked
redistribution.
-Most BZDs undergo microsomal oxidation(phaseI reaction).
-BZDS may be catagorised according to their PK characteristics---
ULTRA-SHORT ACTING BZDs:
Triazolam(t1/2 2-4 hrs),good for sleep induction(b’coz of faster
action).No active metabolite.Rebound insomnia may occur.
Midazolam(t1/2 2-4 hrs),duration of action≤6 hrs,active
metabolite,mainly used as I.V. inducing agent in anesthetic practice.
It also causes amnesia.
SHORT-ACTING BZDs:
Lorazepam(t1/2 10-20 hrs),used IV for pre-anesthetic medication.
Oxazepam(t1/2 6-20 hrs).
Temazepam (t1/2 10-20 hrs).
INTER-MEDIATE ACTING:
Alprazolam(t1/2 10-15 hrs)
Nitrazepam (t1/2 20-30 hrs).
LONGER ACTING BZDs:
Chlordiazepoxide(t1/2 10-30 hrs)
Diazepam(t1/2 20-60 hrs),actve metabolite-nordiazepam &
oxazepam.
Flurazepam(t1/2 40-80 hrs)
Clonazepam(t1/2 18-50 hrs)
Therapeutic uses:
1) To treat anxiety neurosis- Lorazepam, preferred for short-lived
anxiety states, compulsive-obsessive neuroses and tension
induced psychosomatic symptoms(dose 1-6 mg /day).It is the
only suitable BZD for PARENTERAL use.
2) Other drugs used- Oxazepam, Diazepam. Chlordiazepoxide for
chronic states.

3) To treat insomnia- BZDs are hypnotic drugs of choice.


Transient insomnia-rapidly acting drugs- Triazolam(0.125-0.25mg
HS),Temazepam.
Short-term insomnia:Temazepam(15-30mg,HS),or Flurazepam(15-30
mg,HS).
Long-term chronic insomnia:Flurazepam(15-30mg hs) or
Nitrazepam(5-10mg,hs) are preferred because Rebound insomnia and
withdrawal effects are less marked with these drugs.

4)For preanesthetic medication & induction of Anesthesia:


Diazepam,lorazepam & midazolam are generally used.
5) As Skeletal muscle relaxants :Diazepam is the preferred for the
relaxant effects in skeletal muscle spasticity of central origin.
6)As Anti-convulsants- Diazepam and clonazepam (slow i.v) are used
to treat status epilepticus.,to prevent tetanic spasm.
7)Treatment of alcohol withdrawal: Diazepam,oxazepam &
chlordiazepoxide are commonly used.
Adverse Effects:
-High margin of safety.
-Tolerance to sedative effects develops slowly .
-Dependence to BZDs is mild.Abuse liability is low.

Mechanism of Dependence- gradual decline in the Functional GABA


activity resulting from down-regulation of GABA receptor after their
prolonged use.

BZD withdrawal includes- anxiety, insomnia, impaired concentration,


headache, irritability,tremors,palpitation and vivid dreams.

Flunitrazepam-tasteless BZDs, misused b’coz of sedative-amnestic


effects, in sexual assaults or so called “date rapes”.
Benzodiazepine antagonist (Flumazenil)
It binds competitively with high affinity and antagonizes
the binding of BZDs.
Shows first pass effect on oral administartion
After parenteral administration ,it enters the brain and
max conc. is achieved within 5-10 mins.
flumazenil has been employed in:
1) Reversing the BZD toxicity
2) Also tried in hepatic coma and acute alcohol
intoxication.
Dosage-
A dose of 1mg of flumazenil given over 1-3
minutes abolishes the effects of therapeutic doses
of BZDs.
Drug interactions:
-BZDs potentiate the effects of other CNS
depressants(alcohol,hypnotics & neuroleptics).
-Smoking decreases the activity of BZDs.
-Enzyme inhibitors(cimetidine,ketoconazole) enhance BZD
action.
NON-BENZODIAZEPINE HYPNOTICS
Two types of BZD receptor: Type1(BZ1 or ω1
receptor)-throughout brain & large conc.in cerebellum.
Responsible for anti-anxiety,sedative and hypnotic
action.
Type2 (BZ2 or ω2) found mainly in cerebral
cortex,hippocampus, and spinal cord.They are responsible
for muscle relaxation, anti-convulsant action and
amnesia.
Non-BZDs Zolpidem(t1/2 2-3 hr),zopiclone(t1/2 6-8 hrs)
and zaleplon(t1/2 3-4 hrs) act on BZ1 receptor only.
In therapeutic doses they hardly alter REM sleep pattern with
minimal day time residual sedation, minimal rebound
insomnia.

Zolpidem(10-20mg,hs) and Zaleplon(10-20mg,hs) –for


transient insomnia.

Zopiclone(7.5 mg,hs) –short-term insomnia.

Side effects and safety are same as BZDs.


Headache,day time drowsiness and nightmares with higher
doses.
ATYPICAL ANXIOLYTICS:
Buspirone,Ipsapirone and Gepirone--------
-Act through non-GABA ergic systems,
-Low propensity of S/E.
- Used for mild-to- moderate generalized anxiety.
-ineffective in severe cases.
MOA: Selective activation of the inhibitory pre-synaptic 5-HT1A
receptor, they suppress 5-HT neurotransmission.

-Does not interact with BZD receptor or modify GABAergic


transmission.
-Biological lag phase- 2 weeks, not suitable for acute anxiety.
-No muscle relaxant, or anti-convulsant or hypnotic action.
-Minimal abuse liability/does not produce tolerance or physical
dependence.
-Lesser impairment of psychomotor skills.
- Does not potentiate the CNS depressant effects of ethanol.
β-Adrenergic Antagonists:
Propranolol: block sympathetic overactivity

Barbiturates:
MOA: act on the channel modulatory site of GABAA receptor and
potentiate the GABAA mediated inhibitory effects by increasing the
DURATION of Cl- channel opening.
At higher conc, barbiturates directly increase Cl- ion conductance, i.e.
they exhibit a GABA mimetic not facilitatory.

Classification:
Classified according to the duration of action— lipid solubility
--PK characteristics.
Ultra-short acting : thiopental,methohexital(DOA -15-20min).
Short-acting : pentobarbital,secobarbital and amobarbital(DOA 3-8hrs)
Longer-acting : Phenobarbital and mephobarbital(anticonvulsant
drugs).
PK:
Rate of absorption depends on their lipid solubility.
-Sodium salts are alkaline,therefore cannot be given
I.M/S.C inj for fear of necrosis.
These are slightly acidic drugs.
-Redistribution
-metabolise by phaseI and phase-II process.
-alkalization increase their excretion.
Pharmacological Effects:
Dose dependent sedation→hypnosis→GA→coma.
Anti-convulsant action has NO relation with sedative action.
Disrupt the balance between REM:NON-REM by decreasing the
duration of REM sleep.
Hyperalgesic action.
sedative –hypnotic doses have no effect on CVS parameters.High
doses decrease BP,HR & depress myocardium.
higher doses depress respiration.-cause shallow breathing &
Chenye –Stokes rhythm,pulmonary edema,laryngeal edema.
Prolonged use increases the size and weight of smooth E.R
leading to enzyme induction.
Therapeutic Uses:
1) As sedative hypnotics.
2) In GA.
3) As anti-convulsant.
4) Diagnostic aid in psychoanalysis.
5) To treat hyperbillirubinaemia of neonates.,as they increase the
activity of Glucuronyltransferase enzyme by enzymatic induction.
Adverse Effects:
1) metabolic tolerance.
2) Abuse liability.
3) Hangover,impairment of judgement and” “ drug automatism.
4) Respiratory depression,laryngeal oedema and hypersensitivity
reactions.
Drug Interactions:
Induce metabolism of OCPs,anticoagulants,tolbutamide and
theophylline.
Contraindications:
•Liver dysfunction,kidney disease,severe pulmonary
insufficiency, family H/O porphyria/acute intermittent
porphyria- B’coz barbiturates cause induction of ALA-
synthase enzyme in mitochondria.
•This leads to increased synthesis of porphyrins and hence
porphyria and neurotoxicity.
Miscellaneous drugs:
Hydroxyzine: is an antihistaminic having anti-
emetic,sedative, anticholinergic,& LA.
Also used for pre-anesthetic medication, pruritus,anxiety.
Promethazine:
Sedative anti-histaminic with anti-emetic anti-cholinergic
activities.(popularly in children).
Melatonin:
A hormone produced in pineal gland from Aminoacid
tryptophan.
-diurnal rhythm of secretion.
-acts as chronobiotic
-used to t/t jet lag & disorders of delay in sleep induction.
PK:
-Bioavailability variable.
-very first pass metabolism.
-excreted mainly in kidneys.
Thank you

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