Somatic Therapies of Depression - Steven Zavodnick MD
Somatic Therapies of Depression - Steven Zavodnick MD
Somatic Therapies of Depression - Steven Zavodnick MD
of Contents
TRICYCLIC ANTIDEPRESSANTS
Table 14.1. Tricyclic Antidepressants
SECOND-GENERATION ANTIDEPRESSANTS
TABLE 14.4. Second-Generation Antidepressants
LITHIUM
THYROID POTENTIATION
ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY
SUMMARY
REFERENCES
Somatic Therapies of Depression
Steven Zavodnick, MD
e-Book 2015 International Psychotherapy Institute
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unipolar and bipolar depression. While psychotherapy and somatic therapies may
have additive effects in the treatment of depressive states (Weissman, 1979), most
experienced clinicians agree on the value of somatically based therapies in the
Depressive Disorders 5
TRICYCLIC ANTIDEPRESSANTS
inhibitors may be effective in some patients with severe depressions, and lithium
depression and the prevention of relapse has been well demonstrated (Davis,
1976; Klein & Davis, 1969). Patients with acute unipolar depression of at least
response to TCAs is less clear at both extremes of the spectrum of severity, with
benefits of alleviating mild distress against significant drug side effects. In bipolar
depression the risks of TCA treatment include the induction of mania and the less
clinical experience suggests that this happens often enough and presents enough
of a management problem to warrant considerable caution with this patient
group. The drug treatment of chronic depressions has been little studied in any
systematic fashion, although anecdotes suggest some responsiveness of patients
Depressive Disorders 7
adult patients are listed in Table 14.1. These drugs are a group of rather similar
amitriptyline, and doxepin. The dose range of these drugs is 150-300 mg daily
with the exception of nortriptyline and protriptyline, which are given in one-half
and one-fifth of the usual dose respectively. Higher plasma levels of nortriptyline
amitriptyline 150-300
nortriptyline 75-150
protriptyline 30-60
imipramine 150-300
desipramine 150-300
chloripramine 150-300
doxepin 150-300
In the past, putative differences between TCAs have been emphasized, based
among the various TCAs are probably more important than differences
(Montgomery, 1987). The members of this TCA group with more pronounced in
vitro effects on serotonin are typically biotransformed in vivo into metabolites—
than the common practice of sequential drug trials involving a series of similar
agents, careful attention to dose and duration of a course with a single TCA seems
a more effective treatment strategy.
encounter in tolerating the side effects of the more sedating, hypotensive, and
anticholinergic drugs of this group when given in adequate dose. A figure of 3.5
Depressive Disorders 9
mg/kg has been suggested (Glassman, Perel, Shostak, Kantor, & Fleiss, 1979) for
drugs with a 150-300 mg range yielding an average daily dose well over 200
mg/d. Plasma drug levels may be helpful in allowing for variability in patients’
ability to metabolize TCAs (Gold, Lydiard, Pottash, & Martin, 1987). With
nortriptyline, a better drug response has been associated with plasma levels
between 70 and 140 ng/ml; responsiveness is reduced both below and above this
Jatlow, Quinlan, & Bowers, 1982). The usual current methods of measuring TCA
with the suggestion of Gold et al. (1987) favoring the use of nortriptyline in most
TCA trials, in view of the clearer dose response relationship with this drug as well
as the significant reduction in side effects when the secondary amine metabolites
(amitriptyline, imipramine).
titration is unnecessary because the effective dose is usually half that of most
TCAs. Plasma levels may be obtained in the second or third week of treatment,
ideally five to 10 days after reaching a stable dose level, and the drug dose can be
adjusted with respect to the indicated range. Drug dose should be reduced with
the occurrence of significant side effects, in the hope that tolerance will develop
and permit the attainment of an adequate treating dose. For elderly patients and
those with significant cardiovascular disease, starting doses should be lower and
nortriptyline plasma level determination prior to each new dose increase. There is
some evidence suggesting that maintaining patients toward the lower end of the
nortriptyline therapeutic window can minimize the likelihood of cardiac toxicity
while preserving the possibility for the desired clinical response (Glassman &
Bigger, 1981;Roose, 1987).
Response to antidepressant drugs of all types is usually not seen until three
or four weeks after the therapeutic dose is reached. One group of patients has
been described with a good response in week five or week six of a drug trial
(Quitkin et al., 1987). There is little reason to continue TCA alone beyond six
weeks if response has not been forthcoming. At this point the addition of an
Depressive Disorders 11
antidepressant treatment should be considered.
Drug side effects frequently present a limiting factor in the successful use of
TCAs. Patients’ inability to tolerate sedative, hypotensive, or other autonomic
effects may interfere with the goal of achieving a satisfactory dose/plasma level
and the desired clinical response. Secondary amine tricyclics, nortriptyline and
desipramine, were initially explored in the hope that, by using the metabolite
compounds rather than the parent drugs, response lag might be shortened. This
hope was not realized. However, the secondary amines do have the advantage of
markedly less severe side effects than the original agents in the TCA series. While
there is no evidence for any difference in efficacy among any of the TCAs, the
reduced propensity for side effects and the better understanding of the
relationship between plasma level and patient response, in the author’s opinion,
render nortriptyline and desipramine the agents of choice within this group of
drugs.
prolonging the time to reach the effective dose range. Tolerance to this side effect
usually occurs with a more gradual increase in drug dose over a period of weeks.
Sedation is typically mild or absent with nortriptyline or desipramine. Patients
with a prior history of psychosis, either schizophrenia or mania, are at risk for the
reactivation of psychotic symptoms with TCA treatment. The magnitude of the
function in this regard, although this has not been carefully studied. It has been
estimated that 15 percent of the bipolar population may have an episode of mania
in association with TCA treatment (Bunney, 1978). The induction of rapid cycling
from mania to depression is another well-know risk with these agents (Wehr &
manic may exhibit mania or hypomania only while taking TCAs, leading some
investigators to classify this group as part of the bipolar spectrum. Confusional
patients, for whom doses used in younger patients prove to be excessive. These
phenomena are related to the central anticholinergic effects of TCAs and to milder
degrees of memory impairment that may be dose-related with the more strongly
anticholinergic antidepressant drugs. Some patients given TCAs may exhibit a fine
resting tremor. When necessary, low dose propranolol (e.g., 20-40 mg/d) may be
prescribed to alleviate this.
antiadrenergic side effects; patients may be symptomatic with the ever present
dangers of syncope, falls, and fractured bones. Nortriptyline has been reported as
the TCA with the lowest incidence of orthostasis (Roose, 1981). The degree of
Depressive Disorders 13
orthostatic changes prior to the initiation of therapy. Curiously, there have been
observations (Jarvik, Read, Minty, & Neshkes, 1983; Schneider, Sloan, Staples, &
additional sympatholytic TCA side effects that may be encountered. While the
secondary amines. Tolerance may develop over a period of weeks with some
patients; others may be aided with symptomatic measures (e.g., hard candies,
citrus fruit slices for xerostomia, bulk laxatives for constipation). Frank urinary
retention is not especially common, but many patients experience urinary
Symptoms of an acute attack of narrow-angle glaucoma are a sharp pain in the eye
common. With proper attention, caution, and consultation when necessary, this
need not be a bar to effective treatment, even in patients with known cardiac
disease. Hypotension related to adrenergic blockade, heart rate increases with
Biggs, 1977). Once again, the secondary amine TCAs seem to be considerably safer
determining the lowest effective doses to use with these patients. In addition to
baseline and follow-up EKG, patients should be monitored for anginal symptoms,
blocking agents may be used to protect against increases in heart rate and
Depressive Disorders 15
Kantor, 1979) described decreases in premature atrial and ventricular
overdose, second- and third-degree heart block may be seen. TCAs are
contraindicated in the acute phase following myocardial infarction. How long this
contraindication must be observed is unclear. Six months would seem a
because reduced gastrointestinal motility may lead to delayed absorption and late
worsening of symptoms. Physostigmine 1-2 mg intravenously can produce
the half-life of the TCAs, which approximate 20 hours and may be prolonged with
large overdoses. Physostigmine doses must be repeated frequently when patients
exhibit clinical worsening a few hours after the last dose. Many emergency room
Depressive Disorders 17
MONOAMINE OXIDASE INHIBITORS
activity. There has been a decided upsurge of interest in drugs of this class in the
United States over the past 10 years (Quitkin, Rifkin, & Klein, 1979), although they
have been available since the late 1950s. The new attention may be because of an
response relationship, and the management of dietary restrictions and other drug
side effects. While there is clearly some overlap in the efficacy of MAOIs and TCAs,
it is important to realize that there are subpopulations of patients who seem to
assign even rough quantitative estimates as to the size of these groups. Two other
diagnoses for which specific MAOI responsiveness has been suggested are atypical
reviewed. The use of this group of drugs in chronic depressions is only hinted at
neurotic depression (Nies, 1983). Another use of MAOIs has been in patients with
bipolar depression in the hope, as yet unsubstantiated, that the tendency of TCAs
these compounds (see Table 14.2) has contributed to their resurgence in clinical
practice. It has been reported (Robinson Nies, Ravaris, Ives, & Bartlett, 1978) that
application has been an upward movement in the doses prescribed. The dose
range of phenelzine is thought to be 60-90 mg daily and of tranylcypromine 40-60
patients are described tolerating and responding to doses two or three times
higher! There has been interest in more specific MAOIs, with preferential affinity
for one of several enzymatic subtypes. To date, the hopes for either reduced
toxicity or enhanced clinical response have not been realized. Questions remain
about efficacy and whether in vitro specificity is retained at the clinical doses
required.
As with TCAs, the basic clinical technique in using MAOIs is to start patients
Depressive Disorders 19
at a low dose, usually one or two tablets daily, increasing over a two- to four-week
period to the presumed effective dose range, as tolerated. There is a three- to six-
week lag between the time that the effective dose range is reached and clinical
response is seen. Patients should be advised verbally and in writing about the
specific dietary and medication incompatibilities, in order to reduce the risk of
hypertensive crisis.
isocarboxazid 40-60
phenelzine 45-90
tranylcypromine 30-60
Although many physicians are duly concerned about the risks of using
MAOIs, excessive caution is not warranted. Experience has shown that given
proper instruction (Davidson, Zung, & Walker, 1984) most patients are able to
observe adequate precautions regarding diet and medication and that, given this
precondition, the risk of serious hypertensive crisis is low. Other side effects with
MAOIs are frequently neither severe nor problematic and patients often tolerate
with MAOIs. Susceptible patients complain that the medication makes them feel
these phenomena are seen less often with MAOIs than TCAs is uncertain; however,
use. This is of the orthostatic type and may be a limiting factor in treatment. The
risk of syncope, falls, and related injuries is a serious consideration. The use of
sodium chloride tablets (3-6 Gm daily) has been described anecdotally as a means
of increasing intravascular fluid volume to reduce drug-induced orthostasis
(Munjak, 1984). This measure is practical only in younger patients with good
Dry mouth, blurred vision, and constipation are seen with MAOIs. The
Depressive Disorders 21
Anorgasmia, ejaculatory inhibition, paresthesia, and myoclonus are occasional
side effects seen. These may be dose-related and may reflect autonomic and
foodstuffs into component amino acids. MAOIs currently in use inhibit monoamine
oxidase in a variety of tissues, including the gastrointestinal tract, permitting
observe a MAOI diet reducing the risk of severe hypertensive crisis to acceptable
levels. Foods to be avoided are listed in Table 14.3. These include most forms of
cheese, preserved meats and fish, liver, fava beans, brewer’s yeast products (not
baked goods), red wines, and dark beers. Important interactions with medications
with MAOIs except with special experience and close monitoring of patients. The
combination of fluoxetine and MAOIs may be hazardous. Symptoms of
hypertensive crisis include a pounding headache, sweating, pallor, and
MAOIs are discontinued as these are irreversible enzymatic inhibitors and the
Foods: Cheese (except cream cheese, cottage cheese; includes cheese sauces)
Depressive Disorders 23
Red wine
Medications: Decongestants
Appetite suppressants
Stimulants
Antidepressants
Meperidine, morphine
this section these agents will be compared to TCAs from the standpoint of target
patient population, efficacy, and side effects.
is not a TCA although there are rough structural similarities (a three-ring central
moeity with a nitrogen-containing albeit cyclical side chain attached to the central
receptors, which it shares with the neuroleptic agents. Efficacy was similar to that
of TCAs in a patient population that included inpatients and outpatients with the
diagnosis of major depression (Feighner, 1983). The side effect profile is very
similar to that of the TCAs, with the addition of the entire spectrum of acute
extrapyramidal effects occasionally reported with this drug. It appears to be no
center ring of the tricyclic structure perpendicular to the plane of the molecule.
Depressive Disorders 25
The pharmacology is also rather like that of desipramine, with specific effects on
norepinephrine reuptake and postsynaptic receptors. The population in which
maprotiline has been used, its efficacy, side effects, and overdose lethality are
quite similar to those of the TCAs. Because this drug has an elimination half-life
more than twice as long as that of the TCAs, there is a tendency for this agent to
accumulate to rather high blood levels if given in the usual TCA dose range. After
several years on the United States market, the drug’s dose recommendations were
amoxapine 150-300
maprotiline 75-225
trazodone 150-300
fluoxetine 20-80
bupropion 200-450
and receptors for serotonin and may be viewed as a mixed serotonin agonist-
antagonist. The drug also exhibits effects upon postsynaptic beta adrenergic
similar efficacy to the TCAs (Schatzberg, Dessain, O’Neil, Katy, & Cole, 1987). It has
enjoyed fairly extensive use in geriatric depressed patient groups. Two major
areas of advantage for this drug are side effects and overdoses. Main side effects
Priaprism is an infrequent side effect, noted as a curiosity and because there have
the cardiovascular standpoint and should be considered one of the drugs of choice
for the medically fragile depressed patient. Overdose lethality is low.
Fluoxetine has been described (Fuller & Wong, 1987) as the most
specifically serotonergic antidepressant currently available in the United States. It
neurotransmitter systems. Fluoxetine has a long elimination half-life (in the range
of one to three days) with an active metabolite, norfluoxetine, whose half-life is on
the order of one to two weeks. Two practical consequences of this are that the
drug need not be given every day (e.g., if lower doses are desired) and that
Depressive Disorders 27
fluoxetine is recommended to be discontinued five weeks prior to an MAOI trial.
This drug has been used in a patient population that is different from the patients
usually treated with TCAs. Patients who responded to fluoxetine were mainly
experience nervousness or insomnia and for this reason the drug is generally
given in the morning. Headache and nausea, the other common side effects,
usually abate with dose reduction. Although experience is limited, the drug is
advantages over TCAs from the standpoint of patient tolerance and safety and a
different spectrum of activity that is skewed toward the less severe, less acute
depressed patient.
involve the neurotransmitter dopamine, setting it apart from the TCAs, MAOIs,
depression (Zung, 1983). Clinical experience suggests that there are patients who
respond to this agent after failing to improve with MAOIs, TCAs, and other second-
risk of seizure with doses higher than 450 mg daily, these doses are not
recommended and the manufacturer suggests that this drug be reserved for
Depressive Disorders 29
LITHIUM
bipolar patients is clear (Davis, 1976). There is some support for the use of lithium
unipolar depression (Jefferson, Greist, Ackerman & Carroll, 1987; Ramsey &
Mendels, 1980). There is little published work on the use of lithium in atypical
Dramatic responses have been described within 2 to 14 days after the addition of
lithium to standard antidepressant treatment in patients who initially appeared to
included a small number with psychotic symptoms, a group who may not respond
well to TCA alone. Lithium doses were in the 900-1,200 mg daily range with few
additional side effects seen and no clear correlation between serum lithium levels
and clinical response. It is not clear how long to continue combined treatment
after a positive response; some patients maintained their improvement after the
early discontinuation of lithium. The number of patients studied in a controlled
fashion has not been large and, in some cases, lithium was added to another agent
percent. In view of the low risk and the usual need for a four- to six-week trial
prior to initiating a new antidepressant in any patient not responding to the first
drug selected.
described with lithium levels toward the lower range of those used in the
treatment of bipolar disorders, 0.5-0.8 mEq/l (Hullin, 1980). Side effects should be
mild in this range and can include tremor, thirst, polyuria, and possibly some of
expected with chronic treatment. Lithium intoxication is the most severe problem
to be encountered with the use of this agent. This may occur with intentional or
retention of both sodium and lithium (e.g., thiazide diuretic use, febrile illness,
sodium loss through perspiration with heavy exercise). Symptoms are a
Depressive Disorders 31
drowsiness. The serum lithium level is usually, but not always, above the range of
salt load, exacerbating the degree of failure if this is not taken into account.
Additionally, thiazide diuretics may raise serum lithium levels via a mechanism
involving increased proximal renal tubular resorption. Lithium treatment, when
indicated, must proceed cautiously with closer than usual attention to both fluid
Marken, Rickman, Wells, & Mabie, 1989) and should be avoided during pregnancy,
particularly during the first trimester. Lithium is excreted in therapeutic
treatment is in progress.
history and physical exam, including urinalysis, CBC, creatinine, BUN, thyroid
function studies, and chest X-ray. Women of childbearing age should have a
pregnancy that carries the greatest risk. Patients may be started on 600-900 mg
lithium salt daily with plasma lithium levels obtained every four or five days. As
noted above, a target level of 0.6 mEq/1 is probably adequate for the treatment of
depression. Once stable lithium levels are attained, monitoring every one to three
the present the optimal time period for continuing lithium used to potentiate
another antidepressant is not certain. It might be reasonable to discontinue either
Depressive Disorders 33
THYROID POTENTIATION
Thyroid potentiation with triiodothyronine has been found useful for the
1969). Triiodothyronine is used rather than thyroxine as the shorter half-life (one
day vs. seven days) allows for more rapid clearance should discontinuation
become necessary. This treatment is not dependent upon a diagnosis of frank or
morning. Response may be seen within two weeks and supplemental thyroid
expected. The reasons for this are unclear. Whether there is overlap, nonoverlap,
severe depression, the response rate to ECT often exceeds 80 percent (Fink,
1987). The main drawbacks to the use of this treatment are availability and
relapse. Surveys have demonstrated (Asnis, Fink, & Saferstein, 1978) a pattern
that suggests underutilization of ECT in public hospital settings when compared to
populations served may account for some of these findings, it is suspected that
ECT, with its modestly increased demands for equipment, staff, and training is less
(Kiloh, 1982). The clinician is left with the choice of attempting maintenance
treatment with a drug whose efficacy is uncertain or maintenance ECT. Anecdotal
reports suggest that maintenance ECT at intervals ranging from once weekly to
Depressive Disorders 35
once every four to six weeks is often effective.
tendency toward less associated memory disruption, lower exposure of the brain
to electricity, better control of oxygenation and hypertension during treatments,
and more attention to the adequacy of the cerebral seizure for effective treatment.
the number of treatments based upon clinical response is the basic principle. Two
the hope that they will solidify patient recovery. Fink (1979) observed that the
induction of adequate generalized seizures may be more difficult with unilateral
The main side effect of ECT is the acute confusional state which is related to
the number of treatments, patient age, and whether the stimulus is administered
treatments. Memory function is typically recovered one to two months after the
cessation of ECT, although recall of events occurring during the acute amnestic
are usually managed quite easily by anesthesia personnel. Fatalities with ECT are
rare. Kalinowsky (1975) cited a series greater than 100,000 treatments with a
death rate of 0.003 percent despite the fact that many treated patients were
elderly with concomitant cardiovascular and other medical problems. Caution is
Depressive Disorders 37
SUMMARY
dysthymias. The addition of neuroleptics may extend the range of these agents to
the treatment of atypical depression. Some patients with major depression and
some with dysthymia may respond, although the statistics for this are quite
uncertain. Side effects with these drugs may be bothersome and the adverse
effects are usually mild, but effectiveness is clearly less than complete. The second
clinical range of these agents is not clear at the present time. There are no
suggestions that effectiveness is greater than that of TCAs when patients are
upon for diagnostic acumen and clinical perspicacity in the selection and
Depressive Disorders 39
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