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In the name of God
Geriatric
Psychiatry
DR. ISMAIL SADEK
LECTURER OF PSYCHIATRY
FACULTY OF MEDICINE ALAZHER
UNIVERSITY
CAIRO - EGYPT
1
Points of Geriatric
Psychiatry Definition
 Epidemiology
 Prevalence of mental disorder
 Barriers to mental health service utilization
 Normal aging
 Metabolic changes
 Treatment
 Pharmacotherapy, Psychotherapy
 Treatment models
 Psychiatry disorders or problems
commonly seen
 Dementia, depression, delirium, sleep
problems, anxiety, suicide
2
65
3
The Young Old, the Old Old, and the Oldest
Old
 Developmentalists distinguish between
subperiods in this stage, although definite age
boundaries are not yet agreed upon.
 The young old are 65-74 years of age.
 The old old are 75 years and older.
 Some distinguish the oldest old as 85 years and
older.
4
The Young Old, the Old Old, and the Oldest
Old
Many experts prefer to make the distinction
based on functioning, rather than age.
Functional age: A person's actual ability to
function -> the young old = those who regardless
of their actual age are vital and active.
5
:
1
2
3
4
6


.
7
Retirement is
detrimental to an
individual's health; six
months ago he retired
and now he's dead,
retirement killed him
8
Longevity: Life Expectancy and Life
Span
 Life span - the upper boundary of life, the
maximum number of years an individual
can live.
 The maximum life span of human beings
is approximately 120 years of age.
 Life expectancy - the number of years
that will probably be lived by the
average individual born in a particular
year.
 The life expectancy of individuals born
today in Canada is 78.6 years.
9
Sex Differences in Longevity
 Today, life expectancy for females is 82, males 76.
 Beginning at age 25, females outnumber males,
and the gap continues to grow.
 By the time adults are 75 years of age, more than
61% of the population is female.
 These differences are due to health attitudes,
habits, lifestyles, and occupation.
 Biological factors play a role, too, as females
outlive males in virtually all species.
10
Variations in Life Span: Factors
 Quality of the health care system
 Quality of food
 Genetic predispositions
 Health habits
 Geographic location
 Psychological variables: Optimism. Self-esteem.
 Concept: Active life expectancy
11

.600.
102050202150.
12
13
620062.74.41986200692015122030.
4160-6465-70277032%.
)(
14


15
Geriatric population
increasing
16
Aging and the Life Cycle
(Erickson)
 Young adulthood--intimacy versus
isolation
 Middle-aged--generativity versus self-
absorption
 Elderly--Integrity versus despair
(Acceptance of mortality, satisfaction
with one’s meaning in the world)
 Fear of death is usually a mid-life issue
17
Challenges of Late Life
Co-morbid medical illness /
cognitive disorders
Sensory loss
Financial worries
Retirement
Dependency
Dying and death
Bereavement
18
What Is Normal Aging?
Some bodily functions decline with
age, but health problems are not
inevitable.
“Normal” aging must be differentiated
from disease.
notion of chronological age (“how old
are you?”) be abandoned, and
instead that the stages of aging be
considered.
Age cut-offs are artificial and arbitrary.
19
Physical Changes of Aging
Heart
Muscles
Brain
Skin
Kidney
Vision
Hearing
Bones
Taste
~ Pumping effectiveness decreases
~ Muscle mass decreases
~ Some loss of cell structure and function
~ Dryness, slower healing
~ Less efficient
~ Decreases in depth perception, color
perception, and peripheral vision
~ Decreased acuity, esp. higher pitch
~ Mineral loss faster than replacement
~ Decreased taste buds, saliva
production
20
Getting older v. living
longer Mental changes
 Personality
amplification of character traits
 Cognition, memory
mental slowing
transformed memory structure
summerised experiences
 Emotional changes
Emotional maturity
21
Getting older v. living
longer Social changes
 Retirement (financial difficulties)
 Decrease in social status
 Facing somatic and mental
disfunctioning
 Somatic diseases
 Grief (loss of spouse, brothers or
sisters, friends)
 Social isolation
 Moving to nursing/residential home
22
The Aging Brain
Structural Changes
Neurochemical Changes
Changes in Cognitive and Motor
Abilities
23
Structural Changes
Associated with Brain
AgingDecline of brain weight
Neuron loss
Neuronal atrophy
Synaptic loss
Pruning of dendritic trees
White matter changes
Gliosis
24
Neurochemical Changes
in Aging
marked changes in
dopaminergic neurons
decrease in the levels of
markers of the cholinergic
system
25
Age related changes in the Central
Nervous System
 Gross brain atrophy
 Ventricular enlargement
 Selective regional neuronal loss
 Remodeling of dendrite, axons &
synapses
 Appearance of intraneuronal
lipofuschin
 Selective regional decrease in
neurotransmitter & neuropeptides.
26
Contd...........
 Selective modification of
neurotransmitter metabolism
 Possible dysregulation of gaseous
neurotransmitter metabolism
 Glucocorticoid neurotoxicity
 Changes in receptors
 Changes in neurotrophins
 Changes in signal transduction
27
…contd.
 Impairment of calcium homeostasis
 Possible changes in cell cycle regulations
(eg, cyclins)
 Possible changes in extra cellular matrix
proteins (eg. Laminin, proteoglycans)
 Possible regional decline in cerebral blood
flow
 Possible regional decline in metabolic rate
 Appearance of senile plaque &
neurofibrillary tangle
28
Changes in Motor Abilities
Gait slowing
   
Reaction time slowing
   
Balance changes
(vestibular, sensory, motor,
and brain)
29
Changes in Cognitive
Abilities

 Mental speed
   Executive function
   Retrieval
   Episodic memory vs procedural
memory
   Free recall worse than recognition
30
Changes in Cognitive
Abilities
Cognition includes learning,
memory, &. . .
Learning is the ability to
gain new skills and
information. It may be
slower in elderly, especially
verbal learning.
31
Changes in Cognitive
Abilities
Memory : immediate, short- and
long- term memory.
Immediate and Short-term memory
remain intact, however, there ar
affected by concentration which
may be less in older adults.
Long-term memory is most affected
by aging. Retrieval is less efficient;
the elderly need more cues
32
Prospects for Healthy Brain
Aging

Control hypertension
Treat diabetes and
vascular risk factors
Mental activity
   Cognitively demanding
pastimes
   Social networks
33
Prospects for Healthy Brain
Aging
Regular physical activity
Diet : Similar components
to a heart-healthy diet
   Relatively low fat and
cholesterol
   Anti-oxidant rich diet
34
Laboratory Evaluation and Other
Investigations
 Routine Haematological Tests -
Complete Blood cell count Platelets count
Prothrombin time Serum Electrolytes
Blood glucose level Renal Panel
Hepatic Panel
Routine Diagnostic Tests -
 Lipid Profile, Blood sugar fasting, Electrocardiogram,
Chest radiograph,
 Optional – EEG, CT Scan, MRI
35
PHARMACODYNAMICS AND AGING
Neurotransmitter Pharmacodynamic changes
with aging
Dopaminergic system
↓ Dopamine D2 receptor in the striatum
Cholinergic system
↓ Choline acetyl transferase
↓ Cholinergic cell numbers
Contd...........
36
Adrenargic system
↓ cAMP production in response to beta-agonists
↓ Beta – adrenoceptor number
↓ Beta – receptor affinity
↓ Alpha 2 – adrenoceptor responsiveness
Gabaminergic system
↓ Psychomotor performance in response to
benzodiazepines
? ↑ Post – synaptic receptor response to GABA.
Contd...........
37
PHARMACOKINTIC CHANGES WITH AGING38
Psychopharmacological Treatment of
Geriatric Disorders
39
GERIATRIC MANIA
Risk of Mania decline in late life, nonetheless mania
and hypomania affect 5-10% of psychiatric patients.
Established mood stabilizers
 Lithium salts
 Valproate
 Carbamazepine
 Calcium channel blockers
 E.C.T.
Putative Mood stabilizes"
 L. Thyroxine
 Phosphatidyl choline
 Progesterone
 Clozapine,
 Olanzapine
 Magnesium salt
Newer Anticonvulsants
 Lamotrigine,
 Gabapentin
 Topiramate,
 Tigabine
Omega 3 fatty acid
40
Antidepressant Drugs and Dosages Preferred for
Use in the Elderly
Geriatric dosage
(mg per day)
Side EffectsDrugs
Starting
dosage
Maintenance
dosage
Sedation Agitation Anticholinergic
effects
Orthostatic
hypotension
Tricyclic antidepressants
Desipramine 25 50 to 150 Low Low Low Low
Nortriptyline 10 to 25 40 to 75 Moderate Low Low
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibtiors
Citalopram 20 20 to 40 Low Low - -
Fluvoxamine 50 50 to 200 Low Low - -
Paroxetine 10 20 to 30 Low Low - -
Sertraline 25 to 50 50 to 150 Low Low - -
Miscellaneous
Bupropion 100 100 to 400 - Moderate - Low
Nefazodone 100 100 to 600 Moderate -- Low Low
Trazodone 25 to 50 50 to 300 High - Low Moderate
Venlafaxine 75 75 to 350 Low Low Low Low
41
Cardiovascular 
Renal 
Diabetes 
Hepatic ? 
Hematological  
Thyroid   
Arthritis 
Infectious disorders 
Metabolic 
Disorders Lithium CBZ VPA
Anticonvulsants in Depression with medical comorbidity
42
Psychotic agitation in the elderly with mania
Initial treatment
 Haloperidol 0.25 to 0.5 mg IM or PO
 After one hour, administer lorazepam 0.5mg IM or PO
Stabilization
 Repeat alternating doses every hour until calm
 Monitor carefully to avoid over sedation
 Alternative regimen if extra pyramidal symptoms develop
 Atypical antipsychitic riseperidone (0.5mg), or olanzapine (2.5
- 5 mg)
 Avoid chlorpromazine and thioridazine due to their
anticholinergic and hypotensive side effects.
Chronic medication
 Daily dose of medication is determined by adding the total
dose of each medication required to calm the patient and
dividing it equally throughout the day.
43
Adjunctive antipsychotic medication
Risperidone
 Daily divided doses of .5 to 3mg
 Monitor patient carefully for orthostatic hypotension
and EPS as dose is increased
Olanzapine
 Daily doses of 2.5 to 10 mg /day’
 Transient elevation in liver enzyme have been
reported
Risepeidone plus olanzapine
 Observe for increased agitation or other manic
symptom because of breakthrough mania with
risperidone.
Clozapine
 Reserved for patients who are intolerant of
44
ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTICS IN THE
ELDERLY
Drug Metabolite t½ (h) CLR and T½
changes in
elderly
CYP enzyme involved in
metabolism (potential
drug interactions)
Geriatric
doses mg
per day
Clozapine Norclozapine, clozapine
N- oxide (very limited
activity)
4-12 CLR
decreased
CYP1A2, CYP2D6,
CYP3A4 (theophylline,
digoxin, warfarin)
50
Risperidone 9 hydroxy risperidone
(active)
20 CLR
decreased
t½ prolonged
CYP2D6 (inhibitor drugs
such as quinidine) 2
Olanzapine 10-N-glucoranide, N-
demethyl-olanzapine
(inactive)
30 CLR
decreased
t½ prolonged
CYP2D6 (inhibitor drugs
such as quinidine) 10
Quetiapine Multiple (main
metabolite is a
sulphoxide, usually
inactive)
6' CLR
decreased
t½ prolonged
CYP3A4 (phenytoin,
Thioridazine)
200
45
COMMON ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUG
INTERACTION IN THE ELDERLY
Combination Effect
TCAs and conventional
antipsychotics
Raises blood antidepressant
concentrations
SSRIs and clozapine Raises blood clozapine concentrations
Risperidone and clozapine Raises blood clozapine concentration
Smoking Lower blood antipsychotic concentration
Cimetidine Lower blood antipsychotic concentration
Anticholinergic drugs Additive memory and delirious effects
Anticonvulsant, antihypertensive
and sedative drugs
Additive sedative and delirious effects
46
Psychiatric disorder in old
age
OVERVIEWDementia - BPSD
Late Onset Psychosis
Depression in late life
Anxiety in late life
Delirium
Other types of dementia (Lewy Body, FTD)
47
Mental Disorders of old
age
Most common : cognitive
disorders , depressive disorders,
substances use.
Risk factors include loss of social
roles, loss of autonomy, deaths,
declining health, increased
isolation, financial constraints, and
decreased cognitive functioning.
48
Mental Disorders of old
age
Most common :
cognitive disorders
depressive disorders
substances use.
49
Cognitive Disorders
Include:
 Delirium
 Dementia
 Amnestic Disorders
 Psychiatric disorders due to a
Medical Condition
 Postconcussional Syndrome
50
Delirium
Altered state of consciousness
(reduced awareness of and ability
to respond to the environment)
Cognitive deficits in attention,
concentration, thinking, memory,
and goal-directed behavior are
almost always present
Usually acute and fluctuating
51
Treatment of delirium
Look for underlying cause
Close supervision, especially by
family
Reorient frequently
Try not to use restraints, as it can
worsen confusion.
52
Treatment of delirium
Medication
Avoid polypharmacy
Low dose neuroleptic is treatment
of choice, unless the delirium is
due to withdrawal.
If due to withdrawal, use a long-
acting benzodiazepine.
53
Dementing Disorders
Only arthritis more common in
geriatric population
5% have severe dementia, and
15% mild dementia in those over
65
Over 80, 20% have severe
54
Dementing Disorders
Most common causes:
Alzheimer’s disease, vascular
dementia, alcoholism, and a
combination of these 3
Risk factors are age, family
history, and female sex
55
Dementia
Changes
Cognition, memory, language
Personality, abstract thinking,
aphasias
However, level of awareness
and alertness usually intact in
early stages (differentiates
dementia from delirium)
56
Noncognitive symptoms
accompanying dementia
Depressive disorder
Pathological laughter and
crying
Irritability and explosiveness
Delusions or hallucinations
occur during the course of
dementias in nearly 75%
57
Behavior problems in
dementia
Agitation, restlessness,
wandering, violence,
shouting
Social and sexual
disinhibition, impulsiveness
Sleep disturbances
58
Dementia and treatable
conditions
10-15% from:
 heart disease, renal
disease, and congestive
heart failure
 endocrine disorder, vitamin
deficiency,
 medication misuse
 primary mental disorders
59
Alzheimer’s Disease
50-60% of patients with
dementia
5% of those who reach 65
have Alzheimer’s Disease
15-25% of those 85 or older
More common in women
60
Alzheimer’s Disease
General sequence is memory,
language, then visuospatial
functions
On autopsy: neurofibrillary tangles
and neuritic plaques
Involves cholinergic system arising
in basal forebrain
Death occurs in about 7 yrs
61
Vascular Dementia
Second most common
type
Can reduce known risk
factors: hypertension,
diabetes, cigarette
smoking, and arrhythmias
62
Other types of dementia
Multiple sclerosis is
characterized by multifocal
lesions in the white matter.
May show early mood lability
Vitamin B12 deficiency--
neurologic changes may
occur before megaloblastic
changes
Hypothyroidism
Wilson’s disease
63
Treatment of behavior
problems
Consider the likelihood of
depression and anxiety first
Neuroleptics should not be
first choice, and should be
on a “prn” basis ,unless the
patient is psychotic
64
Medicines for behavioral
problems
Valproic acid, trazodone,
and buspirone may be of
benefit
BZDs may aggravate
confusion
65
Drug treatment for
Alzheimer’s Disease
Most current ones affect
acetylcholine
Tacrine
Donepezil (Aricept)
Rivastigmine (Exelon)
Galantamine (Reminyl)
Early intervention may prevent or
slow decline
66
Depression
15% of all older adult
community residences and
nursing home patients
Accounts for 50% of older
adult admissions to a
psychiatric facility
Age is not a risk factor, but
widowhood and chronic
medical illness are
67
Depression
May have more somatic
complaints such as
decreased energy, sleep
problems, pain, weakness,
GI disturbances
Increases use of primary
care medical resources
68
Depression
For those with a medical
condition, depressive
symptoms significantly
reduce survival
Increases risk of suicide
69
Depression in medical
illness
Medicines or the medical
illness may cause
depression
Rule out medical causes
Use psychological
symptoms such as
hopelessness, worthlessness,
guilt
70
Depression in older adults
May have delusions which are
usually persecutory or
hypochondriacal in nature
Need treatment with both an
antidepressant and an
antipsychotic
ECT may be treatment of
choice
71
Bereavement
Normal grief starts with shock,
proceeds to preoccupation,
then to resolution
May be prolonged in elderly,
but consider major depression
if there is marked
psychomotor retardation, lasts
over 2 months, marked
impairment, or if suicidal
ideation
72
Bipolar Disorder
 Do organic workup if onset is
over 65
 Usually more irritable than
euphoric, and paranoid rather
than grandiose
 May have dysphoric mania,
with pressured speech, flight of
ideas, and hyperactivity, but
thought content is morbid and
pessimistic
73
Schizophrenia
Usually before 45, but there is
a late onset type beginning
after age 65
Paranoid type more common
Residual type occurs in 30% of
those affected: Emotional
blunting, social withdrawal,
eccentric behavior, and
illogical thinking predominate
74
Delusional Disorder
Onset between 40 and 55
Persecutory or somatic delusions
most common
May be precipitated by stress, loss,
social isolation , visual impairment,
deafness, immigrant status
75
Anxiety Disorders
Very common in elderly
May occur first time after
age 60, but not usually
Most common are phobias,
especially agoraphobia
May be due to medical
causes or depression
76
Substances and Alcohol
Brain is more sensitive as ages
Due to changes in
metabolism, a given amount
may produce a higher blood
level
May worsen normal changes
in sleep and sexual
functioning
Sudden onset delirium in
hospitalized patients usually
from withdrawal
77
Personality disorders
Borderline, narcissistic, and
histrionic personality disorders
may become less intense
Before diagnosing a
personality disorder, verify that
it is not an improperly treated
Axis I disorder
Some personality traits may
become more pronounced
78
Sleep disorders
Advanced age is associated with
increased prevalence of sleep
disorders
REM sleep behavior disorder occurs
among elderly men
Advanced sleep phase
Dementia associated with more
arousals, increased stage I sleep;
79
80
Thanks for
your mental
effort

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Geriatric psychiatry

  • 1. In the name of God Geriatric Psychiatry DR. ISMAIL SADEK LECTURER OF PSYCHIATRY FACULTY OF MEDICINE ALAZHER UNIVERSITY CAIRO - EGYPT 1
  • 2. Points of Geriatric Psychiatry Definition  Epidemiology  Prevalence of mental disorder  Barriers to mental health service utilization  Normal aging  Metabolic changes  Treatment  Pharmacotherapy, Psychotherapy  Treatment models  Psychiatry disorders or problems commonly seen  Dementia, depression, delirium, sleep problems, anxiety, suicide 2
  • 4. The Young Old, the Old Old, and the Oldest Old  Developmentalists distinguish between subperiods in this stage, although definite age boundaries are not yet agreed upon.  The young old are 65-74 years of age.  The old old are 75 years and older.  Some distinguish the oldest old as 85 years and older. 4
  • 5. The Young Old, the Old Old, and the Oldest Old Many experts prefer to make the distinction based on functioning, rather than age. Functional age: A person's actual ability to function -> the young old = those who regardless of their actual age are vital and active. 5
  • 8. Retirement is detrimental to an individual's health; six months ago he retired and now he's dead, retirement killed him 8
  • 9. Longevity: Life Expectancy and Life Span  Life span - the upper boundary of life, the maximum number of years an individual can live.  The maximum life span of human beings is approximately 120 years of age.  Life expectancy - the number of years that will probably be lived by the average individual born in a particular year.  The life expectancy of individuals born today in Canada is 78.6 years. 9
  • 10. Sex Differences in Longevity  Today, life expectancy for females is 82, males 76.  Beginning at age 25, females outnumber males, and the gap continues to grow.  By the time adults are 75 years of age, more than 61% of the population is female.  These differences are due to health attitudes, habits, lifestyles, and occupation.  Biological factors play a role, too, as females outlive males in virtually all species. 10
  • 11. Variations in Life Span: Factors  Quality of the health care system  Quality of food  Genetic predispositions  Health habits  Geographic location  Psychological variables: Optimism. Self-esteem.  Concept: Active life expectancy 11
  • 13. 13
  • 17. Aging and the Life Cycle (Erickson)  Young adulthood--intimacy versus isolation  Middle-aged--generativity versus self- absorption  Elderly--Integrity versus despair (Acceptance of mortality, satisfaction with one’s meaning in the world)  Fear of death is usually a mid-life issue 17
  • 18. Challenges of Late Life Co-morbid medical illness / cognitive disorders Sensory loss Financial worries Retirement Dependency Dying and death Bereavement 18
  • 19. What Is Normal Aging? Some bodily functions decline with age, but health problems are not inevitable. “Normal” aging must be differentiated from disease. notion of chronological age (“how old are you?”) be abandoned, and instead that the stages of aging be considered. Age cut-offs are artificial and arbitrary. 19
  • 20. Physical Changes of Aging Heart Muscles Brain Skin Kidney Vision Hearing Bones Taste ~ Pumping effectiveness decreases ~ Muscle mass decreases ~ Some loss of cell structure and function ~ Dryness, slower healing ~ Less efficient ~ Decreases in depth perception, color perception, and peripheral vision ~ Decreased acuity, esp. higher pitch ~ Mineral loss faster than replacement ~ Decreased taste buds, saliva production 20
  • 21. Getting older v. living longer Mental changes  Personality amplification of character traits  Cognition, memory mental slowing transformed memory structure summerised experiences  Emotional changes Emotional maturity 21
  • 22. Getting older v. living longer Social changes  Retirement (financial difficulties)  Decrease in social status  Facing somatic and mental disfunctioning  Somatic diseases  Grief (loss of spouse, brothers or sisters, friends)  Social isolation  Moving to nursing/residential home 22
  • 23. The Aging Brain Structural Changes Neurochemical Changes Changes in Cognitive and Motor Abilities 23
  • 24. Structural Changes Associated with Brain AgingDecline of brain weight Neuron loss Neuronal atrophy Synaptic loss Pruning of dendritic trees White matter changes Gliosis 24
  • 25. Neurochemical Changes in Aging marked changes in dopaminergic neurons decrease in the levels of markers of the cholinergic system 25
  • 26. Age related changes in the Central Nervous System  Gross brain atrophy  Ventricular enlargement  Selective regional neuronal loss  Remodeling of dendrite, axons & synapses  Appearance of intraneuronal lipofuschin  Selective regional decrease in neurotransmitter & neuropeptides. 26
  • 27. Contd...........  Selective modification of neurotransmitter metabolism  Possible dysregulation of gaseous neurotransmitter metabolism  Glucocorticoid neurotoxicity  Changes in receptors  Changes in neurotrophins  Changes in signal transduction 27
  • 28. …contd.  Impairment of calcium homeostasis  Possible changes in cell cycle regulations (eg, cyclins)  Possible changes in extra cellular matrix proteins (eg. Laminin, proteoglycans)  Possible regional decline in cerebral blood flow  Possible regional decline in metabolic rate  Appearance of senile plaque & neurofibrillary tangle 28
  • 29. Changes in Motor Abilities Gait slowing     Reaction time slowing     Balance changes (vestibular, sensory, motor, and brain) 29
  • 30. Changes in Cognitive Abilities   Mental speed    Executive function    Retrieval    Episodic memory vs procedural memory    Free recall worse than recognition 30
  • 31. Changes in Cognitive Abilities Cognition includes learning, memory, &. . . Learning is the ability to gain new skills and information. It may be slower in elderly, especially verbal learning. 31
  • 32. Changes in Cognitive Abilities Memory : immediate, short- and long- term memory. Immediate and Short-term memory remain intact, however, there ar affected by concentration which may be less in older adults. Long-term memory is most affected by aging. Retrieval is less efficient; the elderly need more cues 32
  • 33. Prospects for Healthy Brain Aging  Control hypertension Treat diabetes and vascular risk factors Mental activity    Cognitively demanding pastimes    Social networks 33
  • 34. Prospects for Healthy Brain Aging Regular physical activity Diet : Similar components to a heart-healthy diet    Relatively low fat and cholesterol    Anti-oxidant rich diet 34
  • 35. Laboratory Evaluation and Other Investigations  Routine Haematological Tests - Complete Blood cell count Platelets count Prothrombin time Serum Electrolytes Blood glucose level Renal Panel Hepatic Panel Routine Diagnostic Tests -  Lipid Profile, Blood sugar fasting, Electrocardiogram, Chest radiograph,  Optional – EEG, CT Scan, MRI 35
  • 36. PHARMACODYNAMICS AND AGING Neurotransmitter Pharmacodynamic changes with aging Dopaminergic system ↓ Dopamine D2 receptor in the striatum Cholinergic system ↓ Choline acetyl transferase ↓ Cholinergic cell numbers Contd........... 36
  • 37. Adrenargic system ↓ cAMP production in response to beta-agonists ↓ Beta – adrenoceptor number ↓ Beta – receptor affinity ↓ Alpha 2 – adrenoceptor responsiveness Gabaminergic system ↓ Psychomotor performance in response to benzodiazepines ? ↑ Post – synaptic receptor response to GABA. Contd........... 37
  • 40. GERIATRIC MANIA Risk of Mania decline in late life, nonetheless mania and hypomania affect 5-10% of psychiatric patients. Established mood stabilizers  Lithium salts  Valproate  Carbamazepine  Calcium channel blockers  E.C.T. Putative Mood stabilizes"  L. Thyroxine  Phosphatidyl choline  Progesterone  Clozapine,  Olanzapine  Magnesium salt Newer Anticonvulsants  Lamotrigine,  Gabapentin  Topiramate,  Tigabine Omega 3 fatty acid 40
  • 41. Antidepressant Drugs and Dosages Preferred for Use in the Elderly Geriatric dosage (mg per day) Side EffectsDrugs Starting dosage Maintenance dosage Sedation Agitation Anticholinergic effects Orthostatic hypotension Tricyclic antidepressants Desipramine 25 50 to 150 Low Low Low Low Nortriptyline 10 to 25 40 to 75 Moderate Low Low Selective serotonin reuptake inhibtiors Citalopram 20 20 to 40 Low Low - - Fluvoxamine 50 50 to 200 Low Low - - Paroxetine 10 20 to 30 Low Low - - Sertraline 25 to 50 50 to 150 Low Low - - Miscellaneous Bupropion 100 100 to 400 - Moderate - Low Nefazodone 100 100 to 600 Moderate -- Low Low Trazodone 25 to 50 50 to 300 High - Low Moderate Venlafaxine 75 75 to 350 Low Low Low Low 41
  • 42. Cardiovascular  Renal  Diabetes  Hepatic ?  Hematological   Thyroid    Arthritis  Infectious disorders  Metabolic  Disorders Lithium CBZ VPA Anticonvulsants in Depression with medical comorbidity 42
  • 43. Psychotic agitation in the elderly with mania Initial treatment  Haloperidol 0.25 to 0.5 mg IM or PO  After one hour, administer lorazepam 0.5mg IM or PO Stabilization  Repeat alternating doses every hour until calm  Monitor carefully to avoid over sedation  Alternative regimen if extra pyramidal symptoms develop  Atypical antipsychitic riseperidone (0.5mg), or olanzapine (2.5 - 5 mg)  Avoid chlorpromazine and thioridazine due to their anticholinergic and hypotensive side effects. Chronic medication  Daily dose of medication is determined by adding the total dose of each medication required to calm the patient and dividing it equally throughout the day. 43
  • 44. Adjunctive antipsychotic medication Risperidone  Daily divided doses of .5 to 3mg  Monitor patient carefully for orthostatic hypotension and EPS as dose is increased Olanzapine  Daily doses of 2.5 to 10 mg /day’  Transient elevation in liver enzyme have been reported Risepeidone plus olanzapine  Observe for increased agitation or other manic symptom because of breakthrough mania with risperidone. Clozapine  Reserved for patients who are intolerant of 44
  • 45. ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTICS IN THE ELDERLY Drug Metabolite t½ (h) CLR and T½ changes in elderly CYP enzyme involved in metabolism (potential drug interactions) Geriatric doses mg per day Clozapine Norclozapine, clozapine N- oxide (very limited activity) 4-12 CLR decreased CYP1A2, CYP2D6, CYP3A4 (theophylline, digoxin, warfarin) 50 Risperidone 9 hydroxy risperidone (active) 20 CLR decreased t½ prolonged CYP2D6 (inhibitor drugs such as quinidine) 2 Olanzapine 10-N-glucoranide, N- demethyl-olanzapine (inactive) 30 CLR decreased t½ prolonged CYP2D6 (inhibitor drugs such as quinidine) 10 Quetiapine Multiple (main metabolite is a sulphoxide, usually inactive) 6' CLR decreased t½ prolonged CYP3A4 (phenytoin, Thioridazine) 200 45
  • 46. COMMON ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUG INTERACTION IN THE ELDERLY Combination Effect TCAs and conventional antipsychotics Raises blood antidepressant concentrations SSRIs and clozapine Raises blood clozapine concentrations Risperidone and clozapine Raises blood clozapine concentration Smoking Lower blood antipsychotic concentration Cimetidine Lower blood antipsychotic concentration Anticholinergic drugs Additive memory and delirious effects Anticonvulsant, antihypertensive and sedative drugs Additive sedative and delirious effects 46
  • 47. Psychiatric disorder in old age OVERVIEWDementia - BPSD Late Onset Psychosis Depression in late life Anxiety in late life Delirium Other types of dementia (Lewy Body, FTD) 47
  • 48. Mental Disorders of old age Most common : cognitive disorders , depressive disorders, substances use. Risk factors include loss of social roles, loss of autonomy, deaths, declining health, increased isolation, financial constraints, and decreased cognitive functioning. 48
  • 49. Mental Disorders of old age Most common : cognitive disorders depressive disorders substances use. 49
  • 50. Cognitive Disorders Include:  Delirium  Dementia  Amnestic Disorders  Psychiatric disorders due to a Medical Condition  Postconcussional Syndrome 50
  • 51. Delirium Altered state of consciousness (reduced awareness of and ability to respond to the environment) Cognitive deficits in attention, concentration, thinking, memory, and goal-directed behavior are almost always present Usually acute and fluctuating 51
  • 52. Treatment of delirium Look for underlying cause Close supervision, especially by family Reorient frequently Try not to use restraints, as it can worsen confusion. 52
  • 53. Treatment of delirium Medication Avoid polypharmacy Low dose neuroleptic is treatment of choice, unless the delirium is due to withdrawal. If due to withdrawal, use a long- acting benzodiazepine. 53
  • 54. Dementing Disorders Only arthritis more common in geriatric population 5% have severe dementia, and 15% mild dementia in those over 65 Over 80, 20% have severe 54
  • 55. Dementing Disorders Most common causes: Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, alcoholism, and a combination of these 3 Risk factors are age, family history, and female sex 55
  • 56. Dementia Changes Cognition, memory, language Personality, abstract thinking, aphasias However, level of awareness and alertness usually intact in early stages (differentiates dementia from delirium) 56
  • 57. Noncognitive symptoms accompanying dementia Depressive disorder Pathological laughter and crying Irritability and explosiveness Delusions or hallucinations occur during the course of dementias in nearly 75% 57
  • 58. Behavior problems in dementia Agitation, restlessness, wandering, violence, shouting Social and sexual disinhibition, impulsiveness Sleep disturbances 58
  • 59. Dementia and treatable conditions 10-15% from:  heart disease, renal disease, and congestive heart failure  endocrine disorder, vitamin deficiency,  medication misuse  primary mental disorders 59
  • 60. Alzheimer’s Disease 50-60% of patients with dementia 5% of those who reach 65 have Alzheimer’s Disease 15-25% of those 85 or older More common in women 60
  • 61. Alzheimer’s Disease General sequence is memory, language, then visuospatial functions On autopsy: neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques Involves cholinergic system arising in basal forebrain Death occurs in about 7 yrs 61
  • 62. Vascular Dementia Second most common type Can reduce known risk factors: hypertension, diabetes, cigarette smoking, and arrhythmias 62
  • 63. Other types of dementia Multiple sclerosis is characterized by multifocal lesions in the white matter. May show early mood lability Vitamin B12 deficiency-- neurologic changes may occur before megaloblastic changes Hypothyroidism Wilson’s disease 63
  • 64. Treatment of behavior problems Consider the likelihood of depression and anxiety first Neuroleptics should not be first choice, and should be on a “prn” basis ,unless the patient is psychotic 64
  • 65. Medicines for behavioral problems Valproic acid, trazodone, and buspirone may be of benefit BZDs may aggravate confusion 65
  • 66. Drug treatment for Alzheimer’s Disease Most current ones affect acetylcholine Tacrine Donepezil (Aricept) Rivastigmine (Exelon) Galantamine (Reminyl) Early intervention may prevent or slow decline 66
  • 67. Depression 15% of all older adult community residences and nursing home patients Accounts for 50% of older adult admissions to a psychiatric facility Age is not a risk factor, but widowhood and chronic medical illness are 67
  • 68. Depression May have more somatic complaints such as decreased energy, sleep problems, pain, weakness, GI disturbances Increases use of primary care medical resources 68
  • 69. Depression For those with a medical condition, depressive symptoms significantly reduce survival Increases risk of suicide 69
  • 70. Depression in medical illness Medicines or the medical illness may cause depression Rule out medical causes Use psychological symptoms such as hopelessness, worthlessness, guilt 70
  • 71. Depression in older adults May have delusions which are usually persecutory or hypochondriacal in nature Need treatment with both an antidepressant and an antipsychotic ECT may be treatment of choice 71
  • 72. Bereavement Normal grief starts with shock, proceeds to preoccupation, then to resolution May be prolonged in elderly, but consider major depression if there is marked psychomotor retardation, lasts over 2 months, marked impairment, or if suicidal ideation 72
  • 73. Bipolar Disorder  Do organic workup if onset is over 65  Usually more irritable than euphoric, and paranoid rather than grandiose  May have dysphoric mania, with pressured speech, flight of ideas, and hyperactivity, but thought content is morbid and pessimistic 73
  • 74. Schizophrenia Usually before 45, but there is a late onset type beginning after age 65 Paranoid type more common Residual type occurs in 30% of those affected: Emotional blunting, social withdrawal, eccentric behavior, and illogical thinking predominate 74
  • 75. Delusional Disorder Onset between 40 and 55 Persecutory or somatic delusions most common May be precipitated by stress, loss, social isolation , visual impairment, deafness, immigrant status 75
  • 76. Anxiety Disorders Very common in elderly May occur first time after age 60, but not usually Most common are phobias, especially agoraphobia May be due to medical causes or depression 76
  • 77. Substances and Alcohol Brain is more sensitive as ages Due to changes in metabolism, a given amount may produce a higher blood level May worsen normal changes in sleep and sexual functioning Sudden onset delirium in hospitalized patients usually from withdrawal 77
  • 78. Personality disorders Borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality disorders may become less intense Before diagnosing a personality disorder, verify that it is not an improperly treated Axis I disorder Some personality traits may become more pronounced 78
  • 79. Sleep disorders Advanced age is associated with increased prevalence of sleep disorders REM sleep behavior disorder occurs among elderly men Advanced sleep phase Dementia associated with more arousals, increased stage I sleep; 79