Xanax

Alprazolam

Generic Name

Alprazolam

Mechanism

  • Enhances GABAA receptor activity by binding to a high‑affinity benzodiazepine site.
  • Increases chloride conductance → neuronal hyperpolarisation and reduced excitability.
  • Exhibits the classic anxiolytic, hypnotic, anticonvulsant, and muscle‑relaxant effects of benzodiazepines.

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: Rapid (Cmax 1–2 h), high oral bioavailability (~80 %).
  • Distribution: Widely distributed; protein binding ~85 %; crosses blood‑brain barrier efficiently.
  • Metabolism: Hepatic (CYP3A4/2C19); major metabolites are inactive.
  • Elimination: Renal excretion (~70 % unchanged); short half‑life 11–15 h (tolerant individuals), 12–30 h in chronic use.
  • Drug interactions:
  • Potentiated by CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, ritonavir).
  • Reduced by inducers (rifampin, carbamazepine).
  • Avoid concomitant opioids, sedatives → additive CNS depression.

Indications

  • Acute generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) (short‑term rescue).
  • Panic disorder – rapid symptom control.
  • Tremor‑freezing due to benzodiazepine withdrawal.
  • Adjunctive therapy in short bursts for other psychiatric conditions (e.g., major depressive disorder, OCD).

Contraindications

  • Absolute contraindications:
  • Severe respiratory insufficiency, sleep‑apnea with hypoventilation.
  • Acute narrow‑angle glaucoma.
  • Bipolar disorder – risk of mania.
  • Hepatic impairment (CYP3A4/2C19 dysfunction).
  • Warnings:
  • Addiction potential; develop tolerance, physical dependence, and withdrawal syndrome.
  • Cognitive/psychomotor impairment → caution driving, operating machinery.
  • Pregnancy category C – potential fetal harm (withdrawal).
  • Elderly/renal failure → prolonged effects.

Dosing

ConditionInitial DoseTitrationMax DailyDuration
Panic Disorder0.25 mg PO BIDIncrease 0.25 mg/2 days until effect4 mg/day2–4 weeks (up to 6 weeks)
GAD (short‑term)0.25 mg PO TIDIncrease 0.25 mg per TID until symptom control3 mg/day≤ 4 weeks
TNF‑stress0.5 mg PO QHSStable2 mg/day≤ 2 weeks

Taper over 2–4 weeks to prevent withdrawal.
Missed dose → take immediately; do not double dose.

Adverse Effects

  • Common (≤ 10 %): drowsiness, dizziness, fatigue, dry mouth, mild ataxia.
  • Serious (> 10 % or rare):
  • Dependence, tolerance, withdrawal (e.g., seizures, rebound anxiety).
  • Psychomotor impairment → accidents, vehicular fatalities.
  • Respiratory depression (rare, with co‑sedatives).
  • Hepatotoxicity (rare, idiosyncratic).

Monitoring

  • Baseline:
  • Cognitive/motor assessment, liver function tests, serum creatinine.
  • Ongoing:
  • Symptom score (Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale).
  • Dosage escalation logs.
  • Signs of intoxication (slurred speech, impaired coordination).
  • After prolonged use (> 4 weeks):
  • Evaluate for tolerance, dependence, and withdrawal planning.

Clinical Pearls

  • “Rapid‑Onset Rescue”: Start with the lowest dose (0.25 mg) and titrate every 24–48 h; this limits tolerance while still providing sufficient anxiolysis.
  • Withdrawal Protocol:
  • Reduce dose by 25–50 % per week; demonstration of clinical safety → transition to a long‑acting benzodiazepine if continuation is needed.
  • Pregnancy & Lactation: Avoid due to risk of fetal withdrawal and neonatal CNS depression; consider non‑benzodiazepine anxiolytics.
  • Kidney/Old Adult: Use 0.25 mg PO BID; monitor for prolonged sedation because of decreased clearance.
  • Polypharmacy Alert: Co‑administration with SSRIs or MAO‑Is can potentiate serotonergic or hypotensive effects; monitor BP and platelet counts.
  • Prescription Writing Tip: Indicate clear taper schedule on the prescription to reduce misuse.

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• *References available upon request.*

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Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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