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Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
It is not uncommon to experience a night or two of disrupted sleep when there is something major going on in your life. However, sleep/wake disorders are much more than an occasional night of disrupted sleep. A recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that between 50 and 70 million American have problems with sleep/wake disorders (CDC, 2015). Although the vast majority of Americans will visit their primary care provider for treatment of these disorders, many providers will refer patients for further evaluation. For this Discussion, you consider how you might assess and treat the individuals based on the provided client factors.
Learning Resources
Note: To access this week’s required library resources, please click on the link to the Course Readings List, found in the Course Materials section of your Syllabus.
Required Readings
Note: All Stahl resources can be accessed through the Walden Library using this link. This link will take you to a log-in page for the Walden Library. Once you log into the library, the Stahl website will appear.
Stahl, S. M. (2013). Stahl’s essential psychopharmacology: Neuroscientific basis and practical applications (4th ed.). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
To access the following chapters, click on the Essential Psychopharmacology, 4th ed tab on the Stahl Online website and select the appropriate chapter. Be sure to read all sections on the left navigation bar for each chapter.
Stahl, S. M. (2014b). The prescriber’s guide (5th ed.). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
Note: Retrieved from Walden Library databases.
Note: By Day 1 of this week, your Instructor will have assigned you to one of the following case studies to review for this Discussion. To access the following case studies, click on the Case Studies tab on the Stahl Online website and select the appropriate volume and case number.
Note: For this Discussion, you are required to complete your initial post before you will be able to view and respond to your colleagues’ postings. Begin by clicking on the “Post to Discussion Question” link and then select “Create Thread” to complete your initial post. Remember, once you click on Submit, you cannot delete or edit your own posts, and you cannot post anonymously. Please check your post carefully before clicking on Submit!
Post a response to the following:
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•  The patient has been tried on
–     One SSRI, paroxetine (Paxil) 40 mg/d –     One TCA, nortriptyline (Pamelor) 75 mg/d •  Both monotherapies allowed for moderate improvements in her symptoms at best •  Has attended supportive psychotherapy weekly for many years •  Attends AA or NA daily and has a sponsor who is supportive |
Social and personal history
•  Single, never married, and has no children •  Has a General Education Diploma and attends college classes sporadically now •  Past alcohol and SUD, but has been in remission for 10 years •  No current legal issues but has some financial hardships |
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Medical History
•  Patient is overweight •  Has CAD, DM2, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hyperlipidemia, GERD, HTN, glaucoma •  Compliant with her primary care clinician who collaborates well with her psychiatrist
Family History •  MDD in mother and aunts •  SUD throughout her extended family •  GAD in her mother •  Possible ADHD in siblings |
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Current psychiatric medications
•  Paroxetine (Paxil) 40 mg/d (SSRI) |
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Current medical medications
•  Exenatide (Byetta) •  Metformin (Glucophage) •  Glipizide (Glucotrol) •  Ramipril (Altace) •  Albuterol (Ventolin inhaler) •  Fluticasone/salmeterol (Advair Diskus) •  Latanoprost (Xalatan) •  Ezetimibe (Zetia) •  Pravastatin (Pravachol) •  Protonix (Pantoprazole) |
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Question
Based on this patient’s history and the available evidence, what might you do next, given that she still has moderate, residual depression and PTSD symptoms? • Try another SSRI • Switch to an SNRI • Augment with a mood stabilizer • Augment with an NDRI, like bupropion-XL (Wellbutrin-XL) • Augment with a 5-HT1A receptor partial agonist, like buspirone (BuSpar) • Augment with an atypical antipsychotic |
Attending physician’s mental notes: initial evaluation
•  Patient has worked hard on sobriety and even to control her personality disorder symptoms •  She is clearly depressed and agitated with PTSD •  At the time, the only other approved agent for PTSD was sertraline (Zoloft), an SSR •  Buspirone (BuSpar) and bupropion-XL (Wellbutrin-XL) are widely used, off-label depression augmentation options, which might help her •  Perhaps it is best to see what symptoms the patient deems most important to treat first, PTSD or depression •  As she is overweight with metabolic comorbidities, it may be worth choosing medications that limit risk of weight gain |
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Further investigation
Is there anything else you would especially like to know about this patient? •  What symptoms does the patient consider critical? –     Insomnia – she does not sleep well in general and this may be caused either by depression, PTSD, or her current SSRI –     Nightmares and flashbacks – these are very problematic as they trigger in the patient other symptoms such as mood lability and potential for violence and drug use –     Depression – for her, this is secondary. Her depression is usually caused by PTSD flare-ups, their aftermath, and her interpersonal stressors –     She feels that controlling her PTSD and sobriety will mitigate her depression |
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Question
Based on what you know about this patient’s history, current symptoms, and medication, what would you do now? • Try another SSRI • Switch to an SNRI |
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
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• Augment with a mood stabilizer • Augment with bupropion-XL (Wellbutrin-XL) • Augment with buspirone (BuSpar) • Augment with a sedating atypical antipsychotic • Augment with prazosin (Minipress) • Augment with a BZ sedative–hypnotic • Augment with a melatonin receptor agonist hypnotic • Augment with an antihistamine hypnotic |
Attending physician’s mental notes: initial evaluation
(continued) •  Given the higher burden of PTSD and that she is failing an SSRI that is approved for PTSD and MDD, she will need to be tapered off and switched to another medication •  Will need to make a decision to try to treat all of her symptoms at once or treat single target symptoms in order of severity •  Formal CBT, such as exposure therapy for PTSD, is not available in the community and she has good rapport with her supportive therapist and her sponsors; therefore, these treatments should continue •  The other approved medication for PTSD is sertraline (Zoloft), which makes clinical, regulatory, and guideline-based sense •  Avoiding potentially addictive products is clearly warranted |
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Case outcome: interim follow-ups through three months
•  Next, she is cross-titrated off paroxetine (Paxil) and onto paroxetine-CR (Paxil-CR) •  The patient states she has been on paroxetine (Paxil) for some time now and is comfortable with it as it has helped partially •  As informed consent is given, steering her away from continued paroxetine use, her resistance increases •  States paroxetine at higher doses in past has been problematic for her –     She is offered a newer option and she states she would like to try the slow-release CR preparation –     It is titrated to 50 mg/d –     There is no clear benefit •  Is offered a switch to another SSRI, sertraline (Zoloft), or to use a combination strategy bupropion-XL (Wellbutrin-XL) •  After weighing the options and giving informed consent, knowing that sertraline (Zoloft) is mechanistically similar to her paroxetine-XR (Paxil-CR), she opts for the NDRI bupropion-XL (Wellbutrin-XL) combination in the hope of a different outcome than with her SSRI, but also that it may curb her weight and improve her energy |
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
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•  Titrated up to 450 mg/d as a combination with the SSRI, and the depression and vegetative symptoms do improve somewhat, but she continues with her usual partially treated PTSD symptoms and insomnia
Considering her current medication regimen, do you have any concerns? •  Does she have a history of seizures or eating disorder, as bupropion products may induce seizures in these patients? –     She does not •  The paroxetine-CR (Paxil-CR) is a robust inhibitor of the p450 2D6 enzyme system, for which bupropion products are a substrate –     Is it possible that this drug interaction might elevate her bupropion plasma levels and induce a seizure? •  She is benefitting from this combination –     Perhaps bupropion levels might be drawn, or –     Perhaps augmenting her remaining PTSD symptoms with an antiepileptic medication might be a win–win situation, where symptoms and side effects are reduced simultaneously |
Attending physician’s mental notes: six months
•  At the time of this treatment, the CYP450 interaction was a notable concern but this patient was significantly overweight, which likely accommodated this higher end of normal approved dosing •  Her depression appears well treated now but her PTSD residual symptoms continue to be problematic •  As she had modest gains from her first two medications, an SSRI and an NDRI, stopping them might cause relapse •  Adding another augmentation is likely warranted now, using a specific target symptom approach |
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Case outcome: interim follow-ups through nine months
•  The patient agrees to augmentation with the antiepileptic selective GABA reuptake inhibitor (SGRI) tiagabine (Gabitril) •  This agent is not addictive, and in theory should elevate GABA availability, promote anxiolysis, and also protect against bupropion-induced seizures •  This augmentation was supported at this time by open-label trials but had no sanctioned approvals –     Titrated to 16 mg/d –     Sleep improves, but no other clear effects on the PTSD reliving events –     It should be noted that this drug failed in controlled monotherapy trials in the treatment of PTSD some years later, and was also given a warning that despite being an approved epilepsy treating medication, it could actually cause seizures in non-epileptics –     This patient suffered no such complications, however |
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
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Case outcome: interim follow-ups through 12 months
•  The patient gradually presents with more difficulty as random social events trigger PTSD reliving and some mood lability occurs –     There are increased psychosocial stressors and a return of depressive symptoms –     Sobriety continues –     PTSD symptoms increase –     Outside her usual insomnia and nightmares, she now has “a little man watching her” ? Upon investigation, it is determined that she has a visual hallucination of a small man staring down at her when she is on the verge of falling asleep (hypnagogic hallucination) ? This hallucination is not related to any PTSD themes, but she finds it very disturbing Clinically, what types of patients typically suffer hypnagogic hallucinations? •  Narcolepsy patients •  Narcoleptics also may suffer sleep paralysis, cataplexy (drop attacks), as well as their usual REM-onset sleep attacks •  In this case, these hallucinations could also be related to a relapse into drug use or seizure activity (both of which were negative) |
Case outcome: interim follow-ups through 12 months (continued)
•  Evaluated for sleep disorder –     Found to have OSA –     Prescribed a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine and is compliant with its use •  The OSA appears to be unrelated to the hallucinations •  There is no relapse into drug use to explain the hallucinations •  She is not having seizures |
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Question
What would you do now? • Escalate the tiagabine (Gabitril) • Augment with a 5-HT1A receptor partial agonist • Augment with an anxiolytic or hypnotic agent that is not addictive • Add an atypical antipsychotic • Taper off the now ineffective medications and start a new regimen |
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Attending physician’s mental notes: 12 month follow-ups
•  Despite increasing progress on her initial three medication regimen (SSRI, NDRI, SGRI), this was thwarted by social stress and exposure to PTSD-triggering stimuli |
Case outcome: interim follow-up, 24 months
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
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–     Now offered a daytime 25–50 mg quetiapine (Seroquel) dose, which is utilized with good effect
? In total, takes 150 mg daily along with the SSRI and NDRI combination therapy •  After several weeks of no hallucinations and good affect control, she opts to lower the atypical antipsychotic slowly to avoid prolonged exposure and side effects •  This goes well clinically and she continues on her baseline SSRI plus NDRI |
Attending physician’s mental notes: 36-month follow-ups
•  Patient now is fairly stable and doing better •  The SSRI and NDRI work well together –     Symptoms are much less problematic –     They appear to cancel each other’s side effects out in a win–win scenario –     Denies side effects altogether •  There is no increase in metabolic issues with the short-term, low-dose quetiapine (Seroquel) use, and an eye examination for cataracts was negative •  Patient is compliant and we can extend her visits to quarterly, short appointments while we continue her supportive psychotherapy |
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Case outcome and multiple interim follow-ups to 60 months
•  The patient, throughout this time, has sustained months of doing very well with regard to relationships, returning to school, and being active in the community •  She has occasional mild flare-ups of PTSD and BPDO symptoms but these are less frequent and less severe, likely as a result of ongoing sobriety, supportive psychotherapy, and a consistent set of well-tolerated medications •  Occasionally, increased PTSD nightmares and the “little man” return –     The patient self-titrates as-needed quetiapine (Seroquel) 50–150 mg daily doses ? This treats insomnia and restores her sleep cycle ? This treats bedtime hallucinations ? This improves affective lability during the daytime •  It is also determined that she has two types of insomnia –     The spells mentioned here are usually PTSD related and fairly extreme in the patient’s point of view ? The rapid onset of sleep, maintenance of sleep, and possible antipsychotic effect of her atypical antipsychotic is warranted and works well here |
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
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her sleep, (c) alleviated her hallucination, and (d) provided agitation control and mood stability during the day AND it did not increase her metabolic disorder given its low dose and intermittent use •  The atypical antipsychotics likely should not be considered first- line drugs for insomnia, as they do carry risk for TD, EPS, and metabolic disorder that approved and other off-label hypnotics do not carry |
Performance in practice: confessions of a psychopharmacologist
•  What could have been done better here? –     Hindsight is 20/20 –     It likely was a bit risky, in terms of potential drug interactions, having the patient on a full dose of paroxetine and bupropion simultaneously ? If she happened to be a poor CYP450 2D6 enzyme metabolizer, then her seizure risk could increase as her bupropion levels could have elevated ? Use of tiagabine (Gabitril) in addition to these two medications and the 2D6 interaction risk promoted an even greater seizure risk –     Use of a more metabolically friendly atypical antipsychotic with a mild to moderate sedating profile might have been preferred to the quetiapine (Seroquel) used in this case (perhaps asenapine (Saphris)) •  Possible action items for improvement in practice –     Memorize drug interaction tables or use software or the internet to screen for interactions –     If more risky combinations are used, consider a blood draw laboratory test for CYP450 isoenzyme quantification or drug levels –     Be aware that atypical antipsychotics possess positive mechanisms for inducing and maintaining sleep that are not just side effects but reasonable positive clinical effects |
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Tips and pearls
•  Two SSRI antidepressants are approved for treating PTSD: paroxetine (Paxil) and sertraline (Zoloft) •  In recent years, prazosin (Minipress) has acquired an evidence base to support its off-label use in alleviating PTSD nightmares specifically. This would have been a reasonable option in this case •  The beta-blockers have some limited evidence that, if utilized quickly after a trauma, they blunt hyperautonomic responses and that the risk for |
PATIENT FILE
developing full syndromal PTSD may be less. This would have been less helpful in this case as her trauma was not recent
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
Why do some atypical antipsychotics make good hypnotic agents?
and 5-HT2A blocking effects may maintain deeper or more efficient sleep
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
PATIENT FILE
– It is possible this calming effect lowers anxiety and cortical hyperarousal at bedtime, allowing better sleep onset
the atypical antipsychotics and is not found in any approved hypnotic agent
cortex
HA neuron
LAT
TMN
wake promoter
GABA
neuron
VLPO
sleep promoter
SCN
Sleep/wake switch
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
cortex | ||
Â
HA neuron |
Â
LAT |
|
TMN
wake |
Â
GABA |
VLPO
sleep |
promoter | neuron | promoter |
Â
SCN |
OFF
Sleep/wake switch
Figure 11.1. A and B. Sleep/wake switch.
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
Antihistamine and the sleep–wake switch
inhibited (Figure 11.1A)
Serotonin receptor antagonism and sleep
Discussion: Sleep/Wake Disorders
What about 5-HT7 receptor antagonism?