Gowda Chandan R, Lundt Leslie P
1Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine,Midwestern University,Glendale,Arizona,USA.
2Santa Barbara County Alcohol,Drug and Mental Health Services,Psychiatric Health Facility,Santa Barbara,CA,USA.
CNS Spectr. 2014 Dec;19 Suppl 1:25-33; quiz 25-7, 34. doi: 10.1017/S1092852914000583. Epub 2014 Nov 18.
The medications used to treat narcolepsy are targeted toward alleviating symptoms such as excessive sleepiness and cataplexy. The cause of this neurological sleep disorder is still not completely clear, though a destruction of hypocretin/orexin neurons has been implicated. The destruction of these neurons is linked to inactivity of neurotransmitters including histamine, norepinephrine, acetylcholine, and serotonin, causing a disturbance in the sleep/wake cycles of narcoleptic patients. Stimulants and MAOIs have traditionally been used to counteract excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep attacks by inhibiting the breakdown of catecholamines. Newer drugs, called wake-promoting agents, have recently become first-line agents due to their better side-effect profile, efficacy, and lesser potential for abuse. These agents similarly inhibit reuptake of dopamine, but have a novel mechanism of action, as they have been found to increase neuronal activity in the tuberomamillary nucleus and in orexin neurons. Sodium oxybate, a sodium salt of gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), is another class that is used to treat many symptoms of narcolepsy, and is the only U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved medication for cataplexy. It has a different mechanism of action than either stimulants or wake-promoting agents, as it binds to its own unique receptor. Antidepressants, like selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), have also been used, as similar to stimulants, they inhibit reuptake of specific catecholamines. In this article, we seek to review the mechanisms behind these classes of drugs in relation to the proposed pathophysiology of narcolepsy. Appropriate clinical strategies will be discussed, including specific combinations of medications that have been shown to be effective.
用于治疗发作性睡病的药物旨在缓解诸如过度嗜睡和猝倒等症状。尽管已发现下丘脑分泌素/食欲素神经元的破坏与此有关,但这种神经睡眠障碍的病因仍不完全清楚。这些神经元的破坏与包括组胺、去甲肾上腺素、乙酰胆碱和血清素在内的神经递质的不活跃有关,导致发作性睡病患者的睡眠/觉醒周期紊乱。传统上,兴奋剂和单胺氧化酶抑制剂通过抑制儿茶酚胺的分解来对抗白天过度嗜睡和睡眠发作。由于副作用较小、疗效较好且滥用可能性较小,称为促醒剂的新型药物最近已成为一线药物。这些药物同样抑制多巴胺的再摄取,但具有新的作用机制,因为它们已被发现可增加结节乳头体核和食欲素神经元中的神经元活动。羟丁酸钠,即γ-羟基丁酸(GHB)的钠盐,是另一类用于治疗发作性睡病多种症状的药物,并且是美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的唯一用于治疗猝倒的药物。它的作用机制与兴奋剂或促醒剂不同,因为它与自己独特的受体结合。抗抑郁药,如选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)和三环类抗抑郁药(TCA),也已被使用,因为与兴奋剂类似,它们抑制特定儿茶酚胺的再摄取。在本文中,我们试图回顾这些药物类别背后的机制与发作性睡病的拟议病理生理学之间的关系。将讨论适当的临床策略,包括已证明有效的特定药物组合。