Pediatric Psychopharm - Kiddie Concoctions
- Pharmacokinetics: ↑ Total body water, ↓ body fat; immature liver (CYP450) & renal clearance. "Start low, go slow."
- Dosing: Often weight-based (mg/kg); titrate to effect & tolerability.
- Monitoring: Growth charts (height, weight), vitals, S/E (e.g., SSRI-induced activation).
- Stimulants (ADHD): Methylphenidate (MPH) (≥6 yrs), Amphetamines (AMP) (some ≥3 yrs).
- S/E: ↓Appetite, insomnia, growth monitoring essential.
- SSRIs (Depression/Anxiety/OCD): Fluoxetine (MDD ≥8y, OCD ≥7y); Sertraline (OCD ≥6y).
- ⚠️ BBW: ↑ Suicidal ideation risk (<25 yrs).
- Atypical Antipsychotics: Risperidone (ASD irritability ≥5y); Aripiprazole (ASD irritability ≥6y).
- S/E: Weight gain, metabolic syndrome (monitor lipids, glucose).
⭐ Fluoxetine is the only SSRI FDA-approved for MDD in children (≥8 yrs). oka
Geriatric Psychopharm - Golden Year Drugs
- Principle: "Start Low, Go Slow, But Go!"
- Pharmacokinetics (PK):
- ↓ Renal & hepatic clearance → ↑ Drug half-life
- ↑ Body fat → ↑ Volume of distribution (lipid-soluble drugs)
- ↓ Serum albumin → ↑ Free drug fraction (protein-bound drugs)
- Pharmacodynamics (PD): ↑ Sensitivity to CNS effects (sedation, confusion), anticholinergic burden, orthostasis, Extrapyramidal Symptoms (EPS).
- Polypharmacy: High risk of Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs). Regular medication review is crucial.
- Key Drug Considerations:
- SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline, Escitalopram) often first-line for depression. Citalopram max dose 20mg/day (QTc risk).
- Benzodiazepines: Prefer short-acting (📌 LOT: Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam). Use with extreme caution (fall/confusion risk).
- Antipsychotics: ↑ Mortality risk in dementia-related psychosis. Use lowest effective dose for shortest duration.
- Lithium: Narrow therapeutic index. Monitor renal function closely.

⭐ Avoid long-acting benzodiazepines (e.g., Diazepam, Chlordiazepoxide) in elderly due to prolonged sedation, cognitive impairment, and ↑ fall risk. Prefer agents from the LOT mnemonic (Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam).
Pregnancy & Lactation - Bump & Beyond Meds
- Risk-benefit key. Monotherapy, lowest dose. Folic acid vital.
- Antidepressants:
- SSRIs (Sertraline, Escitalopram) preferred.
- Avoid Paroxetine (cardiac defects 📌 Paroxetine = Problems with heart).
- Mood Stabilizers:
- Lithium: Ebstein's anomaly (📌 Lithium = Low-set tricuspid). Monitor levels. Safer in lactation (monitor infant serum).
- Lamotrigine: Safer option; dose adjustment needed.
⭐ Valproate: Contraindicated. High risk Neural Tube Defects (NTDs) & neurodevelopmental disorders.
- Antipsychotics: Atypicals (Olanzapine, Risperidone) if essential; monitor GDM.
- Benzodiazepines: Floppy infant syndrome, withdrawal. Short-acting (Lorazepam) sparingly.
- ECT: Safe & effective throughout pregnancy.
- Lactation: Most drugs in milk. Sertraline preferred. Monitor infant. Clozapine contraindicated.
Medically Comorbid - Tricky Treatments
- General: "Start low, go slow." Prioritize safety; monitor closely.
- Hepatic Impairment:
- Prefer drugs with less hepatic metabolism (e.g., Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam 📌 LOT BZDs).
- Avoid/Caution: Valproate (hepatotoxicity risk), Duloxetine, TCAs.
- Renal Impairment:
- Lithium: Dose adjust by CrCl; monitor levels. Contraindicated if CrCl < 30 ml/min.
- Adjust dose: Paliperidone, Amisulpride, Gabapentin, Pregabalin.
- Cardiovascular Disease (CVD):
- QTc Risk: Antipsychotics (Ziprasidone, IV Haloperidol), TCAs, Citalopram (>40mg; >20mg if >60yrs/hepatic/CYP2C19 poor metabolizer).
- Orthostatic Hypotension: Clozapine, Risperidone, TCAs.
- Post-MI: Sertraline often preferred SSRI.
- Epilepsy:
- ↓Seizure threshold: Bupropion, Clozapine, Chlorpromazine, Maprotiline.
- Safer options: Most SSRIs, Valproate, Lamotrigine.
⭐ Sertraline is generally the safest SSRI in patients with recent myocardial infarction or unstable angina.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Elderly: Lower doses, slower titration; increased risk of anticholinergic effects, falls.
- Pregnancy: SSRIs (sertraline, fluoxetine) preferred; valproate (NTDs), paroxetine (cardiac defects) contraindicated.
- Lactation: Sertraline, paroxetine generally safer; avoid lithium, clozapine.
- Children: SSRIs for depression (monitor suicidality); stimulants for ADHD (monitor growth).
- Hepatic Impairment: LOT BZDs (Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam) are safer options.
- Renal Impairment: Adjust lithium, gabapentin doses; high lithium toxicity risk.
- CYP450 Interactions: Crucial in polypharmacy; be aware of inducers and inhibitors.
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