| Literature DB >> 23213564 |
Ashley Proctor1, Matt T Bianchi.
Abstract
The basic treatment goals of pharmacological therapies in sleep medicine are to improve waking function by either improving sleep or by increasing energy during wakefulness. Stimulants to improve waking function include amphetamine derivatives, modafinil, and caffeine. Sleep aids encompass several classes, from benzodiazepine hypnotics to over-the-counter antihistamines. Other medications used in sleep medicine include those initially used in other disorders, such as epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, and psychiatric disorders. As these medications are prescribed or encountered by providers in diverse fields of medicine, it is important to recognize the distribution of adverse effects, drug interaction profiles, metabolism, and cytochrome substrate activity. In this paper, we review the pharmacological armamentarium in the field of sleep medicine to provide a framework for risk-benefit considerations in clinical practice.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23213564 PMCID: PMC3504423 DOI: 10.5402/2012/914168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Pharmacol ISSN: 2090-5165
Sleeping pill characteristics.
| Generic | Half-life | Excretion | Pregnancy and lactation | Interactions with food, herbs, smoking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alprazolam | 11.2 h | Renal | Pregnancy class D | Smoking and St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Amitriptyline | 9–27 h | Renal | Pregnancy class C | Grapefruit juice may inhibit metabolism; St. John's wort may decrease levels |
| Chloral hydrate | 8–11 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | |
| Clonazepam | 19–50 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class D | St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Diazepam | 20–50 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class D | Food and grapefruit juice may increase levels; St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Dihenphydramine | 2–10 h | Renal | Pregnancy class B | |
| Doxepin | 15 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | High-fat meal increases bioavailability but delays peak level timing |
| Estazolam | 10–24 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class X breast milk: unknown | Grapefruit juice may increase serum levels |
| Eszopiclone | 6 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C breast milk: unknown | Large meals may delay absorption |
| Flurazepam | 2.3 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy unclassified breast milk: unknown | Grapefruit juice may increase serum levels |
| Lorazepam | 12.9 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class D | |
| Mirtazepine | 20–40 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Nefazodone | 2–4 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | Food decreases availability |
| Nortriptyline | 28–31 h | Renal | Pregnancy unclassified | |
| Oxazepam | 3–6 h | Renal | Pregnancy unclassified breast milk: unknown | |
| Quetiapine | 6-7 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | Food increases absorption rate; St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Ramelteon | 1–2.6 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C breast milk: unknown | |
| Temazepam | 9–12 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class X | Grapefruit juice may increase levels; St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Trazodone | 7–10 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | Food increases absorption rate |
| Triazolam | 1.5–6 h | Renal | Pregnancy class X breast milk: unknown | Grapefruit juice may increase levels; St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Zaleplon | 1 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | St. John's Wort may decrease levels |
| Zolpidem | 2.5–3 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | Food and St. John's Wort decrease availability; grapefruit juice may decrease metabolism |
Significant contraindications.
| Alprazolam | Ketoconazole, itraconazole, narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Amitriptyline | Recent or concurrent MAOI use and acute myocardial infarction |
| Chloral hydrate | Hepatic or renal impairment, gastritis or ulcer, and severe cardiac disease |
| Clonazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Diazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Dihenhydramine | Acute asthma and breast-feeding |
| Doxepin | Recent or concurrent MAOI use, narrow angle glaucoma, and urinary retention |
| Estazolam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Eszopiclone | * |
| Flurazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Lorazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Mirtazepine | Recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Nefazodone | Active liver disease, recent or concurrent MAOI use, acute myocardial infarction, concurrent use of carbamazepine, cisapride, or pimozide |
| Nortriptyline | Recent or concurrent MAOI use and acute myocardial infarction |
| Oxazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Quetiapine | * |
| Ramelteon | Concurrent fluvoxamine |
| Temazepam | Narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Trazodone | * |
| Triazolam | Ketoconazole, itraconazole, narrow-angle glaucoma, significant sleep apnea, myasthenia gravis, respiratory insufficiency, liver failure, and pregnancy |
| Zaleplon | * |
| Zolpidem | OSA, repiratory impairment, myasthenia gravis, severe hepatic impairment, and sleepwalking |
|
| |
| Caffeine | * |
| Dexmethylphenidate | Agitation, anxiety, glaucoma, motor tics, history of Tourette's syndrome, and recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Dextroamphetamine | Symptomatic cardiovascular/atherosclerotic disease, moderate or severe hypertension, hyperthyroidism, glaucoma, agitation, history of drug abuse, and recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Dextroamphetamine and amphetamine | Symptomatic cardiovascular/atherosclerotic disease, moderate or severe hypertension, hyperthyroidism, glaucoma, agitation, history of drug abuse, and recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Lisdexamfetamine | Symptomatic cardiovascular/atherosclerotic disease, moderate or severe hypertension, hyperthyroidism, glaucoma, agitation, history of drug abuse, and recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Methylphenidate | Agitation, anxiety, glaucoma, motor tics, history of Tourette's syndrome, and recent or concurrent MAOI use |
| Modafinil | * |
|
| |
| Gabapentin | * |
| GHB | Alcohol and other CNS depressants |
| Pramipexole | * |
| Ropinirole | * |
Stimulant characteristics.
| Generic | Half life | Excretion | Pregnancy and lactation | Interactions with food, herbs, smoking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caffeine | 5 hr | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | |
| Dexmethylphenidate | 2–4.5 hr | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | High-fat foods may increase absorption rate |
| Dextroamphetamine | 10–13 hr | Renal | Pregnancy class C | Absorption may be altered by acidic foods, juices, and vitamin C |
| Dextroamphetamine and amphetamine | 10–13 hr | Renal | Pregnancy class C | Absorption may be altered by acidic foods, juices, and vitamin C |
| Lisdexamfetamine | 10–13 hr∗ | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C | High-fat foods may increase absorption rate |
| Methylphenidate | 3-4 hr | Renal | Pregnancy class C | Food delays absorption; high-fat meals increase Metadate AUC |
| Modafinil | 15 hr | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C |
Miscellaneous sleep medication characteristics.
| Generic | Half life | Excretion | Pregnancy and lactation | Interactions with food, herbs, smoking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gabapentin | 5–7 h | Renal | Pregnancy class C | |
| GHB | 30–60 min | n/a | Pregnancy class B | High-fat meals decrease peak serum level |
| Pramipexole | 8.5 h | Renal | Pregnancy class C | |
| Ropinirole | 6 h | Hepatic | Pregnancy class C |
Figure 1Neuropsychiatric adverse effect profiles. The frequency of reported adverse effects for each drug is given according to the color key. The categories that included a spectrum of symptoms are as follows: parasomnia (abnormal dreams, nightmares, vivid dreams, complex sleep-related behavior, sleep cooking, sleep eating, sleep driving, phone calls, restless legs or leg movements); sleepiness/fatigue (drowsy, hangover, hypersomnia, lethargy, sedation, sluggish, somnolence); gait and coordination (imbalance, dizziness, dysarthria, falls, motion sickness, vertigo); sensory change (hyperesthesia, hypoesthesia, numbness, back pain, myalgia, neuralgia, paresthesia, peripheral neuropathy); motor change (akathisia, ataxia, choreiform movements, dysdiadochokinesis, dyskinesia, hyperkinesias, dystonia, tics, extrapyramidal symptoms, hypertonia, hypotonia, muscle spasm, myoclonus, parkinsonism, Tourette's, tremor, twitching); memory/cognition (abnormal thinking, attention disturbance, amnesia, cognitive disorder, confusion, mental impairment); psychiatric change (anger, anxiety, apathy, dysphoria, emotional lability, irritability, malaise, mood swings, aggression, agitation, disinhibition, hostility, inappropriate behavior, delirium, delusions, depersonalization, derealization, psychosis, hallucinations, mania, nervousness, tension, paranoia, depression).
Figure 2Cardiovascular adverse effect profiles. The frequency of reported adverse effects for each drug is given according to the color key. The categories that included a spectrum of symptoms are as follows: arrhythmia (atrial, ventricular, A-V block, bundle branch block, extrasystole); hypotension (orthostatic).
Figure 3Endocrine/metabolic adverse effect profiles. The frequency of reported adverse effects for each drug is given according to the color key. The categories that included a spectrum of symptoms are as follows: thyroid (hyper- or hypothyroidism), blood sugar (diabetes, increased or decreased blood sugar); appetite change (increased or decreased, dysphagia); menstrual change (amenorrhea, dysmenorrheal, early menses, menorrhagia, menstrual cramps, menstrual disorders); sexual dysfunction (erectile dysfunction, delayed ejaculation, impotence, change in libido, priapism).
Figure 4Gastrointestinal and genitor-urinary adverse effect profiles. The frequency of reported adverse effects for each drug is given according to the color key. The categories that included a spectrum of symptoms are as follows: change in liver enzymes (transaminase, bilirubin, hepatic failure, hepatic encephalopathy or coma, hepatitis); urinary symptoms (abnormal urine, enuresis, dysuria, pyuria, hematuria, difficulty urinating, nocturia, polyuria, incontinence, retention, change in frequency); change in kidney function (hyponatremia, acute renal failure).
Figure 5Cytochrome P450 profiles. The metabolism and interactions with the CYP family enzymes is given for each drug. The features of the interaction are given in the color key. ? refers to the substrate interactions being limited to in vitro studies.